Convert raster logos and simple graphics into vector-style assets for cleaner scaling, editing, print, and brand documentation.
Raster images are made of pixels. They can become blurry when scaled, especially for logos, icons, stamps, and simple graphics. Vector assets describe shapes, so they can scale more cleanly for websites, print, signage, and documentation.
An image vectorizer can help convert a raster logo or graphic into a vector-style asset. The best results come from simple source images and careful cleanup after conversion.
Vectorization works best with clean shapes, strong edges, and limited colors. A flat logo on a plain background is a good candidate. A blurry photo or complex textured image is not.
If the source has a background, remove it first with an image background remover. Cleaner input produces cleaner paths.
A small compressed logo may not contain enough detail. Vectorizing it can create wobbly shapes and inaccurate curves. Look for the largest available source file before converting.
If a true SVG, PDF, or design file exists, use that instead of recreating it from a raster image.
Automated vectorization can create too many points, rough edges, or merged shapes. Inspect the output. Smooth important curves, remove noise, and simplify paths where possible.
For brand marks, small inaccuracies can become visible when enlarged. Do not skip review.
Vectorization may approximate colors. Compare output values with the brand palette. If the logo uses official colors, replace approximate values with exact tokens.
Use a color picker and color converter when matching values between tools.
SVG is useful for web and scalable graphics. PDF or EPS may be required for some print workflows. PNG exports may still be needed for platforms that do not accept vectors.
After creating SVG, use an SVG optimizer to reduce unnecessary data. Keep an editable source version before optimization.
View the vectorized logo small and large. At small sizes, check recognizability. At large sizes, check edge quality and shape accuracy.
Also test on light and dark backgrounds if the logo will be used in both contexts.
Vectorization can rescue missing assets, but it should not replace proper brand source files when those exist. Use it to recover, clean, and standardize graphics when better originals are unavailable.
The goal is not just a vector file. The goal is a scalable asset the brand can trust.