From Pixels to Paths
Raster images like TIFF are built on a fixed grid of pixels. If you try to scale them up for a banner or large print, they immediately become blurry and pixelated. Converting to SVG changes the fundamental structure of the graphic. It turns those rigid pixels into mathematical paths. This means you can resize the resulting file infinitely without ever losing crisp edges or degrading the image quality.
Ideal for Logos and Line Art
Not every TIFF is a photograph. Many designers receive scanned logos, architectural blueprints, or flat typography in this heavy format. Extracting an SVG from these types of graphics makes them usable for modern web design and vector illustration software. You get a clean, scalable asset that is drastically lighter and ready for CSS styling or DOM manipulation on a website.
Zero Server Bottlenecks
Vectorization can be a computationally heavy task. Traditional tools force you to upload your massive TIFF, wait in a server queue, and then download the result. We flipped that model. The tracing algorithms run directly via your browser. Your CPU handles the math, which means the process begins the second you select the file. Total privacy and zero bandwidth wasted.