Batch Tritone PNGs
Transform your photos into stunning three-color artworks in bulk. Map shadows, midtones, and highlights to any custom colors for a professional artistic look.
Drop your images here
Supports PNG, JPG, WebP, AVIF and more. Process hundreds of files at once.
Try with Examples
Loaded Gallery
Tritone Studio
Image List
| Preview | Image Info | Original | Processed | Status | Action |
|---|
Interactive Editor
Tool Settings
Batch Apply
Same settings for all images
Why Choose Batch Tritone PNGs Tool?
The most artistic and secure way to create three-color mapped images directly in your browser.
Three-Color Toning
Go beyond simple duotones. Map your image to three distinct colors for shadows, midtones, and highlights to create sophisticated, gallery-quality color mappings.
Privacy Guaranteed
Your photos never leave your device. All tritone processing happens locally in your browser using secure Canvas API technology. Zero server uploads.
High Performance Batching
Transform entire image galleries in seconds. Our optimized engine handles hundreds of PNG, JPG, or WebP files simultaneously with consistent artistic quality.
How to Create Tritone Images in 3 Steps
Upload Photos
Drag and drop your images into the tool. We support bulk uploading for various formats including PNG and JPG.
Select Colors
Choose three custom colors for shadows, midtones, and highlights. Watch your image transform instantly as you pick colors.
Export Batch
Select your preferred output format and download your tritone masterpieces individually or as a ZIP archive.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a tritone effect?
A tritone is an image created using three colors instead of the standard full color or duotone. It allows for more complex color grading by assigning specific colors to different brightness levels of the image.
Can I use any color?
Yes! You have full control over the colors for shadows, midtones, and highlights. You can use hex codes or the visual color picker to select any color you like.
Is there a limit to the number of images?
No. Since all processing happens on your local machine, there are no artificial limits. You can process as many images as your browser memory allows.