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- OG Image Maker
OG Image Maker
Free tool for link preview images
An Open Graph image (OG image) is the preview image people see when your link is shared on Twitter/X, Facebook, LinkedIn, Discord, Slack, iMessage, or in Google search snippets. It's the single biggest factor in whether someone clicks. A well-designed OG image can lift click-through rates by 40-100% versus a generic screenshot or no image at all.
The standard size is 1200×630 pixels. This works on every major platform without cropping. Twitter prefers 1200×628 and Threads 1200×600 — close enough that the same asset usually works. File size should stay under 5MB; 200-500KB is ideal so previews load instantly. PNG is best for graphics with text, JPEG for photographic content, WebP for both with smaller file sizes (modern platforms support it).
This tool runs entirely in your browser. Pick a size, type your title and subtitle, drop in a logo, choose a background (solid color, gradient preset, or upload your own image), and download. Settings are saved to your local storage so you can iterate over multiple sessions. Nothing is uploaded anywhere.
How to Use This Generator
- Pick a size: use one of the platform presets (Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Discord, Threads, Telegram) or enter custom dimensions.
- Set the background: solid color, one of 8 gradient presets, custom gradient with direction picker, or upload your own image.
- Add your text: title and optional subtitle. Pick fonts, sizes, colors (solid or gradient), and shadows.
- Add your logo (optional): upload PNG/SVG/JPG, scale it, position it relative to the text (above, left, or right).
- Polish with overlays and borders: dot patterns, grid, lines, drop shadows, or framed borders.
- Export: click Download to save as PNG, JPEG, or WebP. Click Copy to put the image directly on your clipboard.
Pro Tips
- Test before publishing: drop your URL into opengraph.xyz, Facebook's Sharing Debugger, or Twitter Card Validator. Cache stale OG images aggressively, so refresh after each change.
- Keep titles short: Twitter and Slack truncate around 60-70 characters. Facebook and LinkedIn allow more, but the first 4-5 words do most of the work.
- High contrast wins: social feeds compress images aggressively. Light text on a dark gradient or dark text on a bright background reads better than subtle two-tone designs.
- Use absolute URLs: always reference OG images with the full https://yoursite.com/path.png URL. Relative paths break in scrapers.
- Set width and height in meta: add
og:image:widthandog:image:heighttags so platforms reserve the right space and don't stretch the image.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an OG image?
Where do OG images appear?
What size should my OG image be?
How do I add an OG image to my website?
Why isn't my OG image showing?
Does this tool save my work?
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