Change image exposure online to brighten dark shots or calm overly bright ones
Use this image exposure editor when the whole image is noticeably too dark or too bright and you need a quick browser-based fix. Upload the file, adjust the exposure control, process it, and review the result before you download.
Exposure correction is great for fast improvements on screenshots, mobile photos, and scans, but it is not magic. The right result is usually one that looks more balanced, not one that forces a dramatic change into damaged source material.
Key Features
- Upload an image, adjust exposure, and generate a processed copy in one focused workflow.
- Useful when you need one fast visual change instead of a full desktop editing session.
- Preview-oriented flow helps you decide whether the effect is subtle enough or strong enough before you download.
- Good for screenshots, photos, simple graphics, and practical content-cleanup jobs.
- Works best when you treat the output as a result to inspect, not an automatic final answer.
Use Cases
- Clean up an image for sharing, documentation, or lightweight design work.
- Create a quick alternate version without opening a full photo editor.
- Make the visual treatment fit the context where the image will actually be used.
- Compare the result against [Change Image Contrast](/change-image-contrast) if a related image adjustment is also needed.
- Use the page to test the idea quickly before you commit to a heavier editing workflow.
How To Use
- Upload the image you want to edit.
- Move the exposure control in small steps.
- Run the page action to process the image.
- Review the preview closely, especially in the areas that matter most.
- If the image needs a second type of correction, continue with [Adjust Image Gamma](/adjust-image-gamma).
- Download the file once the result looks correct at the size where you will actually use it.
Examples
Quick correction for a shareable asset
A screenshot or photo may only need one strong adjustment to become usable. Apply the effect, then compare the result against the original at normal viewing size rather than only as a thumbnail.
Repeat with a smaller adjustment
If the first pass feels heavy-handed, back the control off and rerun it. Small changes are often more durable than one dramatic edit when the file is headed for support, docs, or production content.
Edge Cases & Troubleshooting
- If processing fails, try a smaller file or re-upload the source image.
- If the result looks extreme, move the exposure control back in smaller increments instead of trying to rescue an overprocessed image.
- Always inspect text, faces, and branded colors before you finalize the file.
- A browser preview can hide subtle problems, so check the image at the real display size you expect people to see.
- When accuracy matters, keep the original file until the edited version has been reviewed in context.
FAQ
When should I use this exposure adjustment?
Use it when one focused image change is enough to make the file more useful, readable, or visually appropriate for the next step.
Why not push the control as far as possible?
Because stronger is not always better. The best result is usually the one that solves the problem without creating a new one.
How should I judge the output?
Judge it at the size and in the context where the image will actually be shared, embedded, or downloaded.
Next Steps / Related Workflows
After you finish the edit, review the image in the same app, page, document, or message where it will be used.
For another related image step, continue with [Sharpen Image](/sharpen-image).
A final check is to compare the edited file against the original once more before you publish or send it.