iLoveDXF
Image to SVG

Convert raster images to real SVG vectors

Upload PNG, JPG, WEBP, or BMP images, clean the background, trace contours, preview vectors, and export a browser-generated SVG path file.

Trace

Contours

Clean

Background

Export

SVG Path

PNG/JPG/WEBP/BMPLocal browser tracingReal SVG path output

How it helps

Trace raster images into real SVG path data
Tune cleanup, smoothing, holes, scale, and tracing quality
Preview vector contours before exporting SVG

Best practices

  • - Start with clean, high-contrast logos, icons, or silhouettes.
  • - Use background cleanup before tracing noisy scans or compressed photos.
  • - Preview the downloaded SVG in your design or web tool before publishing.

Limitations

  • - Photographs and gradients can create messy one-color vector shapes.
  • - Small text and fine textures may need manual cleanup.
  • - This first version exports one-color SVG paths, not full-color posterized artwork.

Practical workflows

Turn a logo PNG into an SVG asset

Problem
A logo exists only as a raster image but needs to scale cleanly in a website or design file.
What to check
Upload the image, remove the background, tune tracing quality, and inspect the vector preview before export.
Expected output
You get an SVG file with real path geometry and no embedded raster image.

Clean up a simple icon or silhouette

Problem
A screenshot or exported image needs a lightweight SVG version for reuse.
What to check
Use smart background detection, smoothing, and contour selection to keep only the useful vector shapes.
Expected output
The exported SVG is easier to style, resize, and inspect than the original raster source.

FAQ

Does Image to SVG embed my photo inside an SVG?

No. The tool traces visible contours and exports real SVG path geometry instead of embedding the raster image.

Are image files uploaded to a server?

No. The selected image is decoded, traced, previewed, and exported locally in your browser.

Can this create full-color SVG artwork?

Not in this first version. It creates one-color vector paths that work best for logos, icons, silhouettes, and high-contrast artwork.