Image Optimization Content Hub
A central hub for PixelZipKit compression tests, blog, ecommerce, WebP, SEO, and performance guides.
This hub organizes PixelZipKit's core image optimization resources in one place. It connects compression test results with practical publishing guides so visitors can quickly choose the page that matches their workflow.
New visitors can start with the compression benchmark and the quality 60, 70, and 80 comparison to understand the baseline. Visitors with a specific task can go directly to blog, ecommerce, mobile photo, WebP SEO, or performance guidance.
Each guide is reviewed against fixed test assets, file-size comparisons, and common publishing failure cases. The goal is to give every page a distinct use case and decision rule instead of repeating the same generic advice.
- Core compression tests and practical guides grouped by topic
- Conversational summaries and business-ready decision rules
- Connected workflows for blogs, ecommerce, mobile, WebP, and performance
- Fixed test assets and review criteria linked from the guides
Why the core guides are separated
Image compression is a crowded topic, so PixelZipKit does not treat every article as equal. The hub highlights the guides that carry the strongest publishing value: benchmarks, quality comparison, blogs, ecommerce, mobile uploads, WebP SEO, and performance.
Plain language plus business rules
A first-time visitor needs a quick explanation, while a site operator needs a rule that can be used in a workflow. Core guides therefore separate conversational summaries from business-ready decision language.
Core Image Optimization Guides
The eight pages below carry the main publishing value of the site: tests, use cases, quality decisions, search, and performance. Each guide includes a plain-language summary and a business-ready rule.
Compare published WebP output files at quality 60, 70, and 80 using fixed images for photo, text screenshot, and transparent graphic review.
Open core guideA practical checklist for resizing, compressing, naming, and publishing blog images without hurting readability.
Open core guideHow to reduce product image file size while preserving the detail shoppers need to make a purchase decision.
Open core guideA clear guide to choosing JPG, PNG, or WebP for photos, screenshots, logos, transparent graphics, and web pages.
Open core guideA practical comparison of 60, 70, and 80 quality settings for blog images, product photos, thumbnails, and mobile uploads.
Open core guideHow to prepare smartphone photos for blogs, stores, forms, and messages without installing a separate app.
Open core guideHow WebP conversion supports faster pages, better user experience, and image SEO when used with proper filenames and alt text.
Open core guideHow image size, dimensions, lazy loading, and WebP conversion affect performance and user experience.
Open core guideSupporting Resources
- Naver Blog Image Size and Compression GuideHow to prepare clear, lightweight images for Naver Blog posts, reviews, travel articles, and product content.
- Google Image SEO: Filenames and Alt TextHow to write image filenames, alt text, and surrounding content that help search engines and users understand your images.
- Product Thumbnail Compression ChecklistHow to make ecommerce thumbnails lightweight, consistent, and clear across category grids and recommendation sections.
- Transparent PNG to WebP: What to CheckHow to reduce logo, icon, and cutout image file size while preserving transparency and clean edges.
- Image Compression Guide for Social Media UploadsHow to reduce photo and card image size before uploading to social platforms without making them look over-compressed.
- How to Reduce Photo Size for Email AttachmentsPrepare compatible, smaller image attachments for email without sending unnecessarily huge smartphone originals.
- Portfolio Image Optimization GuideBalance visual quality and page speed for design, photography, development, and creative portfolio websites.
- Batch Image Compression WorkflowA practical workflow for compressing many images consistently before blog, ecommerce, social, or email publishing.