Resize Any Image in Various Sizes Automatically With ImageSizer
If you are a designer, blogger or work with images on professional or personal front, you would find moo0 ImageSizer quite a useful tool. There are times images need to be resized into various sizes either to send over in email, post on webpages or use them in a designing project.
Manually resizing each image can be a hectic and slow process. ImageSizer is a utility designed specially to make this fast and easy. It can not only handle all image formats but it also provides several options for the size and number of images to be created.
Save Time In Resizing Images:
Imagesizer has a simple drag and drop interface that makes the process of resizing images much faster. You do not need to go to the image folder to select the image. Just drag it to the dropbox from any folder.

Create Various Sizes or a Specific Size:
It lets you create several images with different sizes or you can manually decide the size you need. The various sizes option is especially useful if you want to experiment with different sizes before making a final decision.

Advanced Options for Image Re-sizing:
ImageSizer lets you select the number of resized images you want to create. Also, you can either just enlarge or shrink the image or select both the options. This way you can see both enlarged and smaller format of the image.
Another cool feature is this software can enlarge a given picture and keeps the quality as good as possible. You can also use this to resize an image into thumbnails.

Using the Specific Size Resizing option you can either resize the image by (%) or by defining the size. You can keep the aspect ratio (Height and Width ratio) intact by checking the provided option.

While testing ImageSizer, we tried resizing all 4 formats (.jpg, .png,.bmp and.gif). It resized the images quickly and efficiently. It handled transparent png images quite well too.
Overall, ImageSizer is a very useful tool and can meet all your Image Resizing needs. It has a very small installation file (2.5 Mb) and works with Windows 7, Vista and XP.
This post was originally written on June 25, 2010

