Create ultra-tiny 8x8 pixel graphics for micro indicators, retro tiles, and compact UI signals with precise resizing and quick local export.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
Design tiny assets that stay readable, aligned, and lightweight in dense interfaces and pixel art grids.
8x8 works for status dots, tiny toggles, and LED style indicators where a single pixel shift changes meaning. Keep shapes bold so the signal reads instantly in compact rows.
Build 8x8 tiles for pixel art sprites and retro game maps, keeping each tile aligned to a strict grid for consistent patterns and cleaner animation loops.
Preview the exact 8x8 grid before export so you can simplify edges, trim noise, and avoid stray pixels that blur inside tiny buttons and controls.
Boost contrast and reduce color count so symbols stay legible; at 8x8, strong silhouettes outperform gradients and fine textures. High contrast also survives UI scaling.
Resize multiple micro assets to the same 8x8 frame so icon sets align across toolbars, tables, and compact chips without jitter. This keeps states aligned.
Export tiny PNG or WebP files measured in bytes, ideal for dense icon libraries and widgets where speed and caching matter. Great for bundles with hundreds of icons.
Upload a file, set 8x8 pixels, and export a micro graphic in moments.
Upload a clear source image and check the preview to see which details survive at 8x8 before you commit to the tiny grid.
Enter 8 for width and height, lock the ratio if needed, and nudge the crop so the most readable shapes sit in the center.
Download as PNG for transparency or WebP for size, then reuse the micro asset across menus, toggles, or pixel art sets.
Turn any graphic into an ultra-small 8x8 icon for micro indicators and pixel art tiles. Local processing keeps edges clean and files light.
Resize to 8x8Quick answers for making ultra-tiny 8x8 pixel graphics that remain clear and usable.
8x8 is used for micro UI indicators, pixel art tiles, and LED style icons where every pixel counts. It is common in retro games and tiny status lights where space is tight. It also works for tiny loading dots. It keeps UI clean.
Yes for most logos. At 8x8, fine details disappear, so logos must be reduced to a simple mark or monogram. If the brand needs more detail, use a larger size and scale down only for micro indicators. Use a single bold mark.
Crop to the strongest shape and remove texture before resizing. Simplifying to a clean silhouette prevents muddy edges, and even one pixel of padding can make the icon easier to read in tight UI rows. Test at actual size before export.
PNG is best for crisp edges and transparency. WebP can be smaller for web delivery. JPEG is not ideal because compression artifacts blur tiny lines and sharp corners at this scale. WebP is helpful when you need tiny downloads.
Yes. Use PNG or WebP and keep the background transparent. This is helpful for overlaying micro icons on different UI colors without visible boxes or halos. Transparent files make overlays cleaner and reduce edge artifacts.
Yes. 8x8 is a classic pixel art tile size for sprites and icons. Keep colors limited, align to the grid, and preview at actual size so each pixel contributes to the final shape. Limit the palette to avoid noisy dithering.
Upscaling from smaller files usually looks soft. For the best result, start from a larger source or a clean vector and downscale to 8x8 so edges stay sharp. Vector sources usually downscale the cleanest. This keeps edges crisp.
Most 8x8 files are only a few kilobytes or less. Flat icons compress extremely well, so you can use many of them without affecting page weight or UI performance. Even large sets add minimal weight. They are easy to batch and cache.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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