Change Image Color Tint — Free Tool
Shift the entire mood of a photo by rotating its hue or overlaying a custom color tint. imgic’s color-tint tool gives you a hue rotation control paired with an opacity slider, so you can go from a gentle wash to a dramatic color shift. The preview responds instantly to every tweak.
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Why use this tool?
Start by uploading a JPEG, PNG, or WebP file. Use the hue rotation dial to cycle through the color spectrum and the opacity slider to set how heavily the tint blends with the original image. The combination lets you create anything from a cool blue cast to a fiery red overlay, all visible in the live preview before you download. When the palette feels right, export the tinted image with one click. Because processing relies entirely on browser-native canvas operations, your files never leave your device and no image data is sent to any external service.
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Frequently asked questions
How do the hue and opacity controls interact?
The hue rotation shifts every color in the image around the color wheel by the degree you choose. The opacity slider then controls how much of that shifted result blends over the original, letting you create subtle washes or fully saturated color overlays.
Is my file private and secure?
Completely. Your file is processed 100% inside your browser using the Web APIs built into your device. Nothing is uploaded to any server — imgic never sees, stores, or transmits your images. You can even use these tools offline once the page has loaded.
Can I match a specific brand color?
You can rotate the hue and adjust opacity until the overlay closely matches your target shade. For precise hex-level matching you may need a dedicated color picker, but for most tinting purposes the slider range covers the full spectrum.
Does the tint affect transparent areas?
If your PNG has transparent pixels, the tint applies only to the visible areas. Transparency is preserved in the output, so overlaying the exported image on another background works as expected.
What happens when I replace the current image?
Loading a new file resets the hue rotation and opacity controls to their defaults. This ensures the new image starts without any settings carried over from the previous one.