For editors and producers

The story's ready. The image needs one more thing. Do it in 5 seconds.

Your editorial meeting ends at 2. The story publishes at 3. The wire photo has a messy background and the graphics desk is backed up. Upload the photo, get a clean cutout, and have your hero image ready before anyone asks 'is the art done yet?'

Newsroom with journalists working on computers

What your newsroom uses it for

Article hero images

Wire photo has a cluttered background? Turn it into a clean cutout for your story header — no need to wait for the graphics team.

Staff headshots

Everyone took their headshot in a different room with different lighting. Run them all through and get a consistent background for your entire team page.

Thumbnails & covers

YouTube thumbnails, podcast covers, newsletter headers — clean subject isolation makes any thumbnail look more professional.

Event photo galleries

Batch-process 200 event photos so your post-event gallery goes live while the audience is still buzzing about the event.

Social share images

Layer cutouts into Canva or your CMS for quick social composites. The kind of image that stops someone mid-scroll.

Press kits

Deliver consistent executive headshots and product images to partners — every shot has the same clean background, no matter who took it.

schedule

Fast enough for a publishing cycle

Average processing is 3–5 seconds per image. A batch of 20 headshots takes about a minute of wall-clock time — fast enough to fit between your editorial meeting and publish time.

Process a photo now

Questions from the newsroom

We use AP and Reuters photos. Can we run those through?
As long as your license permits modification, yes. PixMiller processes the image — you're responsible for making sure your usage rights cover editing.
What about group photos with multiple people?
The model detects everyone in the frame and keeps them all — it doesn't randomly erase someone in the back row. If you need to isolate one person, crop the image first, then upload.
Some of our press photos are pretty low-res. Will it still work?
Low-res images go through the same pipeline. Edge quality depends on source resolution, but even a 640px-wide wire photo gives you a usable cutout for thumbnails and social shares.