Pixelate & Mosaic
Pixelate parts of an image to hide sensitive details.
How to use Pixelate & Mosaic
What this tool does
The Pixelate & Mosaic tool applies a classic block-mosaic effect to any image directly in your browser. A single slider controls the block size from 2 px (fine, barely visible) to 80 px (coarse, strongly stylised). The live canvas preview updates in real time as you drag so you can judge the right level without committing to a download. When you are satisfied, one click saves the pixelated result as a PNG.
The algorithm is the canonical nearest-neighbour mosaic approach: the image is drawn at 1/block-size dimensions (so each block becomes a single pixel), then scaled back up with image smoothing disabled, which forces the browser to replicate each pixel as a solid block. The result is identical to what you would get in a professional editor — a clean, hard-edged mosaic with no blurring or interpolation between blocks.
Why you might need it
Pixelation is used in two main contexts: privacy and aesthetics.
For privacy, pixelation is one of the most recognisable redaction techniques. Sharing a screenshot of a bug report that contains an email address, a name, or an account number requires redacting that information before posting it publicly. Pixelation is instantly readable as intentional obfuscation, which communicates more clearly than a black rectangle that the content is deliberately hidden rather than missing due to a technical problem.
For aesthetics, the pixelation effect has a long history in game art, retro illustration, and internet culture. An 80 px block size on a portrait produces the look of an early 8-bit video game sprite, which is a popular style for avatars, stickers, and thumbnails. Lower block sizes (8–15 px) produce a mosaic tile effect that works well as a background texture or as an artistic overlay on a product image.
Content creators use it to add a retro filter to gaming screenshots. Graphic designers use it as a background texture layer. Security-conscious users apply it to document scans and screenshots before sharing. Teachers use it to create partially-revealed image puzzles.
How to use it
- Drop your image onto the upload area or click to browse and select a file.
- The canvas loads your image at its original size with no effect applied.
- Drag the Block size slider to the right to increase pixelation.
- Watch the mosaic update instantly at each step.
- For precise control, click the slider and use the left and right arrow keys.
- Click Download PNG to save the mosaic result.
- Click Clear to start over with a different image.
Common pitfalls
The most common surprise is that block size is absolute in pixels, not relative to the image. A block size of 20 px looks very fine on a 4000 × 3000 px photograph but very coarse on a 400 × 300 px thumbnail. Start with a smaller value for high-resolution images and increase until the preview looks right.
Pixelation does not remove information — a sophisticated reverse process can partially reconstruct the original from a pixelated image if the block size is small. For stronger privacy protection, use a larger block size (30 px or more), or overlay a blacked-out rectangle on sensitive regions instead.
At very large block sizes on images with many small features, the mosaic can look visually cluttered because each block is averaging a complex mix of colours. This is expected behaviour and can look interesting as an artistic effect — or you can reduce the block size until the composition feels cleaner.
Tips for best results
For retro avatar effects, square images work best. Crop your photo to a square first (using the Image Cropper), then apply a block size of 40–80 px for a bold 8-bit look. Combine with the Black & White preset in the Image Filter Applier for a classic monochrome sprite appearance.
For background textures, use a moderately blurred version of a photograph (Image Blur Tool) and then apply a small pixelation (4–10 px) to add a subtle texture without a strong mosaic pattern. The layered approach produces more depth than either effect alone.
For document redaction, apply a block size of 20–30 px over the sensitive areas. Ideally, target only the region that needs redacting rather than the whole image — for selective redaction, you may need a dedicated image editor. This tool pixelates the full image.
Explore the rest of the canvas-filter family: Image Filter Applier for one-click style presets, Image Blur Tool for smooth Gaussian blur, Image Brightness & Contrast Adjuster for exposure control, and Image Grayscale Converter for desaturation.
Frequently asked questions
Is my image sent to a server when I pixelate it?
How does the pixelation algorithm work?
What is the difference between this and the Image Blur Tool?
What block size should I use to obscure faces or text?
What format does the download produce?
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