Multi-Format Support

Batch Thermal Vision Filter

Apply realistic infrared thermal vision effects to your images in bulk. Simulate heat maps with professional color mapping entirely in your browser.

Drop your images here

Supports PNG, JPG, WebP, AVIF and more. Process hundreds of files at once.

Try with Examples

Why Choose Batch Thermal Vision Filter?

The most professional and secure way to create realistic infrared style images directly in your browser.

Realistic Heat Maps

Apply advanced gradient mapping algorithms that accurately simulate professional infrared sensors (FLIR style). Control sensitivity to highlight specific "heat" areas.

Instant Batch Engine

Process hundreds of images in seconds. Our local engine uses GPU acceleration (Canvas API) to apply thermal filters instantly without any server lag.

100% Privacy

Your photos are never uploaded. All processing occurs locally in your browser, ensuring your data remains completely private and secure.

How to Create Thermal Vision Images in 3 Steps

1

Upload Images

Drag and drop your photos into the tool. We support batch uploading for all major image formats.

2

Customize Filter

Choose a color preset, adjust sensitivity and diffusion, and toggle digital scanlines for a high-tech look.

3

Download & Export

Select your preferred output format and download individually or as a single ZIP archive.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the thermal vision filter work?

Our tool analyzes the luminance (brightness) of each pixel in your photo and maps it to a specific color on a heat-map gradient. Brighter areas are mapped to "hotter" colors like white, yellow, or red, while darker areas are mapped to "colder" colors like blue or black.

Can I process hundreds of images?

Yes! Our batch processing engine is designed for high-volume workflows. You can select hundreds of files at once, and our local processing ensures it remains fast without server-side queues.

Does it work on mobile devices?

Absolutely. The tool is fully responsive and works directly in any modern mobile browser (Safari, Chrome, etc.) on both iOS and Android.