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画像フォーマット変換

完全フォーマット変換ガイド

JPG、PNG、WebP、AVIFフォーマット間で変換。各フォーマットの使用場面。

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When to use 完全フォーマット変換ガイド

JPG、PNG、WebP、AVIFフォーマット間で変換。各フォーマットの使用場面。 This guide focuses on the practical choices that matter before you export: input quality, privacy, format, and the final destination for the image.

Use ShotEdit Image Converter when you need to convert images between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, and ICO without uploading files. The best results usually come from starting with a clear source image, choosing one intended output, and checking the result at the size where it will be published.

Recommended workflow

Start by preparing the source image. Remove unrelated content, avoid screenshots with private data, and keep the most important subject visible. Then open the relevant ShotEdit tool, apply the smallest number of edits needed, and preview the result before downloading.

For web publishing, balance quality and file size. For documentation, prioritize readable text and sharp interface edges. For social media, use a canvas and crop that will still make sense on a phone.

  • Choose the right tool for the image task.
  • Preview the result before exporting.
  • Use a format that fits the destination.
  • Keep a consistent style across related visuals.

Privacy and quality checks

Before exporting, scan the image for personal information, internal IDs, private URLs, tokens, or customer data. If the image is for a public article, remove anything that does not need to be shared.

A good final file should be easy to understand without extra explanation. If the image feels crowded, simplify it before producing converted image files.

Next step

Open ShotEdit Image Converter and apply the workflow above to a real image. For related tutorials, return to the ShotEdit guides.

FAQ

Does this require installing software?

ShotEdit Image Converter runs in the browser, so the normal workflow does not require a desktop app installation.

What should I check before exporting?

Check readability, private information, output format, and whether the final image still works at its intended display size.