Criador de colagens de fotos gratuito

Crie belas colagens a partir de várias fotos com layouts predefinidos.

Nenhum dado sai do seu dispositivo

Solte imagens aqui

ou clique para importar várias imagens (2 a 6)

Modo de usar

  1. Importe 2 a 6 imagens arrastando-as para a área de soltar ou clicando para navegar.
  2. Escolha um layout entre os modelos disponíveis (grade 2×2, 3 colunas, 1+2 etc.).
  3. Ajuste o espaçamento e as margens para personalizar, depois clique em Gerar a colagem.
  4. Clique em Baixar em PNG para salvar sua colagem.

Perguntas frequentes

Quantas imagens posso usar ?

Você pode importar 2 a 6 imagens. A ferramenta seleciona um layout que corresponde ao número de imagens fornecidas.

Quais formatos de imagem são suportados ?

PNG, JPEG, WebP, GIF e a maioria dos formatos de imagem comuns são suportados. A compatibilidade depende do seu navegador.

Posso alterar a ordem das imagens na colagem ?

As imagens aparecem na ordem em que foram importadas. Reimporte-as em outra ordem para alterar o arranjo.

Where Photo Collages Earn Their Place

A collage compresses several images into one frame, useful any time you have a story that's bigger than a single shot but smaller than a slideshow:

Pick the Layout to Match the Story

Different grid patterns send different visual signals. The classics:

The rule of thumb most photo magazines follow: avoid grids of 4 unless every quadrant is genuinely strong. A weak quadrant in a 2×2 drags the whole composition. A 3-up linear or a hero-plus-2 can hide a weaker third image more gracefully.

Aspect Ratios for Different Platforms

Where the collage will live drives the right aspect ratio:

DestinationAspect ratioRecommended pixel size
Instagram square1:11080×1080
Instagram portrait (2026 default)4:51080×1350
Instagram / TikTok Stories / Reels9:161080×1920
Open Graph share card1.91:11200×630
Pinterest2:31000×1500
Print (A4, 300dpi)~1:1.412480×3508

For social media, generate at the platform's native pixel size (or twice it for retina screens). Smaller resolutions get upscaled by the platform with quality loss. Larger get downscaled, fine, but wasted bytes.

Spacing, Borders, and the Look of "Deliberate"

A few small choices separate a collage that reads as composed from one that reads as a print error:

Privacy and EXIF

Photos carry more than the picture: EXIF metadata can include the GPS coordinates of where the shot was taken, the camera serial number, the original capture timestamp, and software fingerprints. Server-side collage tools receive all of that. This tool runs entirely in your browser via the Canvas API, the photos go from your file system to an in-memory canvas, get composed locally, and the only thing that leaves the page is the PNG you choose to download. The output PNG carries no EXIF (raster pixels only), which is generally a privacy win, the GPS-stripped collage is safer to post publicly than the originals.

Common Mistakes

  1. Mixing portrait and landscape orientations in a grid that needs consistent shape. A 2×2 of mixed-orientation photos either crops awkwardly or leaves big empty regions. Decide before shooting; or pick a layout (linear strip, hero + thumbnails) that handles mixed orientation gracefully.
  2. Photos with very different exposures or colour temperatures. One sun-flooded outdoor shot next to a tungsten-lit indoor shot looks accidental rather than composed. Edit each photo first to match white balance and exposure before collaging.
  3. Too many photos in a small canvas. A 6-up at 1080×1080 means each photo gets only ~360×540 pixels. Faces and detail disappear. Aim for fewer, larger panels rather than packing in everything.
  4. Using a white background with photos that have white edges. The photos visually merge with the gap and the layout falls apart. Switch to a coloured fill or add a thin contrasting border.
  5. Forgetting that social platforms compress aggressively. Fine details (text overlays, narrow lines) often disappear in the platform's re-encoding. Test by uploading and viewing in-app, not just on desktop.
  6. Generating at too low a resolution. A 600×600 collage looks fuzzy on a retina iPhone. Generate at the platform's recommended size (or 2×) and let the platform downscale.
  7. Pasting the wrong order. Image upload order determines panel order. Re-upload in the order you want, or rename the files with leading numbers (01-, 02-, 03-) before bulk-selecting.

More Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the limit 6 photos?

Past 6 panels, individual photos become too small to read on a typical 1080-pixel canvas, faces blur, captions disappear, the visual story reduces to "there are some photos here." The 2-to-6 sweet spot covers the vast majority of real-world collages: pairs (before/after), triples (linear narrative), 4-up (real estate, family of four), and 6-up (event recap). For larger photo sets, a slideshow or carousel format works better than a single collage.

Can I rearrange the photos after uploading?

Not within the tool currently, image order matches upload order. The simplest workaround: rename the files with leading numbers (01-hero.jpg, 02-detail.jpg) before bulk-selecting them, or upload in the precise order you want by clicking each one separately rather than dragging them all at once.

Will my photos be uploaded anywhere?

No. Photos go from your file system into in-memory Image objects, the canvas composes them locally via drawImage(), and the PNG download is generated via canvas.toBlob() in your browser process. No bytes are uploaded to any server. This matters when the photos contain GPS data, faces, or content under embargo.

Will EXIF GPS data leak through to the downloaded collage?

No. The Canvas API works on raster pixels only, it doesn't read or carry EXIF metadata. The output PNG contains no GPS, no camera model, no original timestamp. This is a privacy win when you're collaging photos that were taken at sensitive locations and want to share without leaking the coordinates.

What aspect ratio should the output be?

Match the destination. 1:1 (1080×1080) is the safest universal default, works on every Instagram surface and most social platforms. For portrait-feed posts (Instagram's modern default), 4:5 (1080×1350) gets more screen real estate. For Stories / Reels / TikTok, 9:16 (1080×1920) is required to avoid letterboxing. For Open Graph share cards, 1.91:1 (1200×630).

Can the collage be printed?

Yes, open the PNG and print from any image viewer. For high-quality print (A4 at 300 dpi, framed wall art, photo books), generate at 2480×3508 or larger. The Canvas API caps at the browser's maximum canvas dimensions; on iOS Safari that's around 4096×4096 in practice, on desktop it's much higher. For poster-sized prints, do the work on desktop.

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