TinyImage
タイニー
TinyPNG is great for dragging a file or two into a browser, but it lives outside the Figma workflow. TinyImage brings the same compression quality into the design file, adds WebP/AVIF/video support, and remembers presets. Here’s what I consider when choosing between them.
Key differences
- TinyImage supports lossless and lossy modes with live previews; TinyPNG is lossy-only.
- TinyImage batch renames and exports directly from Figma pages; TinyPNG requires manual uploads/downloads.
- TinyImage handles GIF, MP4, and PDF compression in addition to PNG/JPG. TinyPNG stops at static images.
- TinyImage processes entire artboards with one click, which matters when launching campaigns.
When TinyPNG still helps
If you just need to shrink a single screenshot outside of Figma, TinyPNG is fine. But for day-to-day design work where assets live in Figma and deadlines are tight, TinyImage is the obvious alternative.