Logo PNG/JPG to SVG
Convert logos to SVG the clean way
This page is tuned specifically for logos, icons, and brand marks. The goal is a vector you can actually use: smooth curves, fewer nodes, correct bounds, and an SVG that imports cleanly into Figma, Illustrator, Inkscape, and cutting tools. Instead of “make it vector” in the abstract, the controls here map to the problems logos usually have: jagged edges, missing thin details, speck noise, and weird bounding boxes.
Logo-first vectorization: how to get a clean SVG
Logo conversion is not the same as converting a photo. For a logo, you typically want one clean silhouette (or a small number of shapes), smooth curves, and minimal point noise so the SVG is easy to edit and scales cleanly. This tool uses threshold-based vectorization and smoothing controls so you can decide what becomes “ink,” how aggressively edges are simplified, and how much dust gets removed.
A good workflow is to lock down the shape first, then refine smoothness. Start with a high-contrast source, pick a preset, adjust threshold until the mark is complete, then increase curve tolerance until the output is smooth without warping corners or flattening intentional geometry. If you see tiny dots and freckles, increase turd size to strip specks without destroying small features.
Most “bad SVG” outcomes come from pushing the wrong control. Threshold is for deciding what is included. Tolerance is for reducing nodes. Turd size is for removing isolated blobs. If you change all three at once, it is hard to diagnose. Make one change, check preview, then move to the next problem.
Best results checklist
High contrast logo on a plain background converts best. Crop extra whitespace so bounds match the mark.
Start with Clean shapes for logos. Only use Edge mode when the input is a photo-like image.
Threshold decides what is treated as ink. If details vanish, raise it. If blobs form or holes fill in, lower it.
Curve tolerance smooths curves and reduces points. For many logos, 0.35 to 0.6 is a practical range.
Etsy logo to SVG
Prepare Etsy logo SVGs for shop branding and listings
Use this version when a shop logo, watermark, badge, or simple brand mark needs to become an SVG starting point for Etsy listing graphics, digital downloads, packaging files, or seller asset review. Clean source artwork works best, and every SVG should be inspected before publishing or selling.
Convert a high-contrast logo or brand mark into scalable SVG paths you can review for Etsy shop branding, listing images, watermarks, or digital product files.
Open the exported SVG in design software before publishing. Check small text, counters, isolated dots, and scale so the logo behaves like a useful seller asset.
Seller workflow
Logo to SVG for Etsy: practical workflow notes
Convert Etsy shop logos and brand marks into scalable SVG seller assets. Use this page when that specific output is the fastest path, then jump to the related tools below if you need a different export, cleanup, or craft-file workflow.
Best for
- logo to svg for etsy
- Shop, listing, brand, and ecommerce asset preparation
- Seller previews, reusable logos, and product graphics
- Moving between SVG tracing, resizing, favicon, and PNG/JPG export
Settings to try
- Use simple trace presets for logos, badges, and clean product artwork.
- Use exact export size and transparency controls before uploading previews.
- Clean or resize the SVG before making PNG, JPG, favicon, or shop assets.
Useful limits
- These pages prepare assets but do not validate marketplace or platform rules.
- Always preview files in the destination platform before publishing listings or themes.
- Use official platform docs for current upload rules and account-specific limits.
Related tools
Need help choosing?
Read the concise workflow, preset, settings, and troubleshooting docs without adding clutter to the converter.
FAQ
Why does my logo look jagged in the SVG?
Increase curve tolerance slightly. If the input is low-res, upscale or use a higher quality source first.
Why did parts of the logo disappear?
Threshold is too low (not enough pixels counted as ink). Raise threshold, or use the Keep thin details preset.
Why do I see random dots?
Increase turd size. For scanned or dusty images, values 3 to 5 usually help.
Does this preserve multiple colors?
No. This produces a single filled shape color. If you need multi-color vectorization, you will need a different pipeline.
