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How to Make a Photo Collage Online Free

Combine several photos into one clean grid collage in your browser, with tips on layout, spacing, and aspect ratio so the result looks polished.

What a Collage Is Good For

A collage combines several images into a single frame, which is useful when one picture cannot tell the whole story. Trip recaps, before-and-after comparisons, product listings, mood boards, and event highlights all read more clearly as a grid than as a scattered pile of separate photos.

The strength of a collage is compression: it lets a viewer take in many moments at a glance and lets you post one tidy image instead of a long, easily-skipped gallery. A clean layout signals care, which is why a simple grid usually communicates better than an ornate, crowded arrangement.

Choosing a Layout

Start by matching the layout to where the collage will live. A square grid suits most social feeds, a tall arrangement fits a phone story or a printed page, and a wide strip works well as a banner. Pick the overall shape first, then decide how many cells you need.

Fewer, larger cells give each photo room to breathe and are better when the individual images matter. A denser grid of many small cells suits a summary where the collective impression is the point. Try to group photos with a similar orientation together, since mixing portrait and landscape shots in one row often leaves awkward gaps.

Spacing, Borders, and Consistency

The gap between photos, sometimes called the gutter, has a big effect on how finished a collage looks. A small even gap separates the images cleanly, while no gap at all can make busy photos blur together. Keep the spacing uniform so the eye reads the grid as one deliberate object.

Consistency across your source photos also helps. Images shot with similar lighting or edited with a similar tone sit together more comfortably than a mix of very different looks. If one photo is much brighter or more saturated than the rest, it will pull attention away from the whole and unbalance the arrangement.

Building Your Collage

The collage maker composes everything locally in your browser, so your photos are never uploaded to a server and stay private on your device. That also means it works even on a slow connection once the page has loaded.

  1. 1Open the tool and choose a layout template or grid size that matches your target shape.
  2. 2Add your photos, then drag them into the cells where you want each to appear.
  3. 3Adjust the spacing between cells and the outer border to taste.
  4. 4Fine-tune how each photo sits within its cell so the important part is not cropped out.
  5. 5Download the finished collage as a single image ready to post or print.

Exporting for the Right Place

Match the export to the destination. For screens, a standard image at the platform recommended dimensions keeps the file small and sharp, while for printing you want the largest resolution the tool offers so the picture does not look soft on paper. Knowing the target before you export saves you from redoing the layout later.

If a platform crops previews to a square, keep the most important faces or details away from the edges so nothing vital gets cut. When in doubt, leave a little breathing room around the outside of the grid so the collage survives any automatic cropping the destination applies.

Frequently asked questions

Are my photos uploaded when I make a collage?

No. The collage maker composes everything locally in your browser, so your images stay on your device and are never sent to a server. This keeps personal photos private.

How many photos should a collage have?

It depends on your goal. Use three to five larger cells when each photo matters, and a denser grid when the overall impression is the point. Grouping photos of the same orientation together avoids awkward gaps.

What size should I export a collage at?

For social media, export at the platform recommended dimensions to stay sharp and small. For printing, choose the highest resolution available so the image does not look soft on paper.

Tools mentioned in this guide

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