tinyimgcompress guides & articles
10 in-depth guides on Tiny Image Compress and related topics.
Choosing an image format
Choosing an image format
The Best Image Format for the Web: A Clear Guide
A clear decision guide to the best image format for the web, comparing JPG, PNG, and WebP across photos, graphics, and transparency so you always pick the right one.
Choosing an image format
PNG vs JPG: Which Image Format Should You Use?
A clear, practical comparison of PNG and JPG that explains how each format works, when to use one over the other, and how compression and transparency shape the right choice.
Choosing an image format
How to Resize Images Online the Right Way
A practical guide to resizing images online without distortion. Learn how pixels and aspect ratio work, how to match display size, and how to pair resizing with compression.
Website speed
Website speed
Compress Images for WordPress: A Speed Guide
A step-by-step guide to compressing images for WordPress, covering why media bloats sites, how to resize and compress before uploading, and the format choices that keep pages fast.
Website speed
Image Optimization for SEO: Rank Higher With Faster Images
A complete guide to image optimization for SEO, covering compression, Core Web Vitals, alt text, file names, and modern formats so your images help rather than hurt your rankings.
Website speed
How to Make Images Load Faster on Your Website
Practical, jargon-free techniques to make images load faster, from resizing and compression to modern formats and lazy loading, so your pages feel instant and keep visitors engaged.
Image compression how-to
Image compression how-to
How to Compress Images Without Losing Quality
A careful guide to compressing images without visible quality loss, explaining lossless methods, smart lossy settings, and a workflow that keeps every file sharp while shrinking it.
Image compression how-to
How to Compress Images: A Simple Step-by-Step Guide
A beginner-friendly walkthrough of how to compress images the right way, covering formats, lossy versus lossless settings, and a repeatable workflow that keeps every file small and sharp.