Merge · Client-side · No upload

Combine Photos Into One Image Multiple Files, One Export

Combine photos into one image in your browser — no install, no account, no server upload. Load multiple pictures locally, choose a strip or grid preset, adjust spacing and background on a client-side canvas with live preview, and export one flattened file without sending your photos to a remote service.

Combine Photos — Free

No upload · No server · Single flattened PNG

What this tool does

  • Upload multiple photos from your device
  • Five layout presets: vertical strip, horizontal strip, 2-column grid, 2×2 grid, and 3×3 grid
  • Adjustable gap spacing between cells
  • Background color control for the collage canvas
  • Live canvas preview as you adjust layout and spacing
  • Download or copy flattened collage PNG output
  • Optional EXIF metadata stripping before export
  • On-device processing — images never uploaded to a server

Multi-photo merge — not a layer compositor

Pix-8 Image Collage Maker combines photos into one image by tiling them in preset layouts on a client-side canvas — not by stacking transparent layers or blending two files with a decorative overlay. Pick vertical, horizontal, or grid structure, tune gap and background, preview live, and export one PNG. It does not auto-stitch panoramas, merge HDR brackets, or place one small graphic on top of a single base photo like Image Overlay.

Why combine photos into one image on-device?

Merge tools that upload every file before compositing add delay and privacy risk. Pix-8 processes locally — the direct fit when you need to combine photos into one image for a contact sheet, comparison board, or shareable recap without routing your gallery through a cloud editor.

One file out

Export a single flattened PNG that contains every selected photo in your chosen layout — ready to download, copy, or share.

Flexible grid and strip presets

Vertical stack, horizontal row, two-column grid, 2×2, or 3×3 — pick the structure that matches how many photos you need in one image.

Private client-side merge

Your photos stay on your device during compositing. Pix-8 never receives your files on a server.

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Open Image Collage Maker

    Navigate to Pix-8 in your browser — no install, no sign-up, and no remote upload queue.

  2. Step 2

    Add photos and choose a layout

    Upload multiple JPG, PNG, or WEBP files, select how they should tile together, and adjust gap and background locally.

  3. Step 3

    Export one combined image

    Preview the merged canvas, then download or copy one flattened PNG — optional EXIF metadata stripping before export.

Frequently asked questions

Can I combine photos into one image without uploading to a server?

Yes. Pix-8 Image Collage Maker runs entirely in your browser. Your photos are read locally, arranged on a client-side canvas, and merged into one flattened PNG exported from your device. Your images are never transmitted to Pix-8 or any third-party server.

How many photos can I merge into one image?

Upload as many photos as your chosen layout supports. Vertical and horizontal strips scale with your photo count. The 2×2 grid combines up to four photos; the 3×3 grid combines up to nine. Gap spacing and background color are adjustable with live preview. The tool does not blend photos with transparency layers, stitch panoramas automatically, or merge two images with a decorative overlay graphic.

How is combining photos into one image different from Image Overlay?

Image Collage Maker arranges multiple full photos into a grid or strip and exports one combined file. Pix-8 Image Overlay places one built-in decorative graphic on a single base photo — it is not designed for multi-photo grid layouts. Collage Maker does not free-drag individual photos, add typed captions, or layer a logo file like Pix-8 Watermark.

Related use cases

Ready to combine photos into one image?

Open Image Collage Maker, merge photos on-device, and export — no server upload.

Open Image Collage Maker

Client-side processing only — your images never leave the browser.