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Tint Image

Tint an image locally to a single hue - a monochrome wash like a toned photo. No upload.

Hue

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    Your files never left your device

      Is my file uploaded?

      No. Everything runs in your browser - your file never leaves your device. How this is verifiable

      No upload100% local
      Your content stays with youno third-party access
      Servers in GermanyGDPR by design
      Independently auditedTLS A+ · HTTP headers A+

      Tinting turns an image into a monochrome wash: the original colours are discarded, but the brightness of each pixel is kept and mapped onto a single, freely chosen hue. The result is the look of a toned black-and-white photo - light areas stay light, dark stay dark, all in one colour.

      A tint suits classic photo looks such as a blue cast (cyanotype) or a warm sepia feel, for cohesive duotone-like graphics, or a single colour accent across a whole image series. The hue slider runs around the full colour wheel. The output keeps your original format and dimensions.

      Everything runs entirely locally in your browser on a canvas (no upload, even offline) - your image never leaves your device. The luminance of each pixel is computed and then mapped onto the chosen hue at a fixed saturation. Animated images are flattened to a single frame.

      Specifications

      Specifications
      Input formatsJPG, JPEG, PNG, WEBP
      Output formatJPG
      Batch processingYes
      ProcessingLocally in your browser (JavaScript)
      File uploadNone

      In 3 steps

      1. Drop or tap your image (PNG, JPEG or WebP).
      2. Choose the hue (0 to 360 degrees on the colour wheel).
      3. Download the tinted image (several at once as a ZIP).

      Limitations: Maps the luminance of each pixel onto a single hue (0 to 360 degrees) at a fixed saturation; the original colours are lost in the process (monochrome tint). The original format and dimensions are preserved (PNG keeps transparency; JPEG flattens onto white). Animated inputs are reduced to a single frame.

      FAQ

      Is my image uploaded?

      No. The tinting runs entirely locally in the browser on a canvas - even offline. Your image never leaves your device.

      How is it different from rotating the hue?

      Rotating the hue shifts the existing colours; tinting discards them and maps everything onto a single hue - a monochrome wash.

      Are the original colours kept?

      No, and that is intended: only the brightness matters, the colour comes entirely from the chosen hue.

      Does it keep my format and size?

      Yes. A PNG stays a PNG (with transparency), a JPEG stays a JPEG, and the dimensions are unchanged.

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