Reframe lets you extend the frame of an image to create a new aspect ratio. It adds new content around your existing image, so you can easily turn a square picture into a wide banner or a tall story post without cutting anything important out.
How does it work?
You pick a new aspect ratio, like 16:9 or 9:16, and Reframe will automatically fill in the new space around your image. It tries to match the style, colors, and feel of the original, so everything looks natural.
Can I pick a custom size?
Yes, you can either choose a preset size like 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, and so on, or set a custom aspect ratio that fits whatever you need.
Does Reframe change the original image?
No, your original image stays as it is. Reframe just adds to it by creating new areas around it.
Is there a size limit for images?
Yes, there is. The minimum dimension is 256x256 pixels, and the maximum is 1440x1440 pixels.
If your image is larger, it will automatically scale down.
If the image is smaller than the max dimensions, it doesn't upscale; it uses it as is.
If your image is smaller, it won’t be able to be reframed.
Scaling down usually works fine, but scaling up too much can make the image look a little softer or blurrier.
Are there any things Reframe struggles with?
Yes, a few things to be aware of:
Fonts: If there is text near the edges, Reframe might try to extend the text, but it cannot perfectly match fonts or letter spacing. You might see weird letters or broken text.
Faces: If faces are near the border, it might try to invent parts of faces, but faces are very sensitive to small errors. Sometimes faces can look off or unnatural.
Transparent images: Reframe struggles with images that have transparent backgrounds. It fills based on solid colors, which can create weird artifacts, repeating patterns, or unwanted fills. You will also lose the transparent background. If you need transparency again, you can use “Remove Background” after Reframing.
Extreme aspect ratios: Small changes, like from 1:1 to 4:3, usually work great. But if you pick a very wide or very tall ratio, like 2:1 or 1:2, it has to invent a lot more, and the new parts might not match perfectly. You might see some patterns or artifacts if you stretch it too far.
Will the new parts always match perfectly?
Most of the time, they blend nicely, but depending on your image, small differences in texture, lighting, or style can happen. If something looks strange, you can always retry.
Can I control what gets added?
Not directly inside Reframe. It fills automatically based on what it sees. Right now, you cannot brush or write a detailed prompt to guide the fill.
When should I use Reframe?
Use it when you want to quickly adapt an image for different formats or platforms, like creating a banner, a story post, or a cover image, without having to manually crop or rebuild the design.
Does Reframe use my credits?
Yes, each Reframe action costs 20 tokens. If you run out, you can upgrade or buy extra tokens.
Questions?
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