Bulk Banner Resizing — Cutting Size Adaptation to 10 Minutes
ImageFactory Engineering · Published 2026-06-12
The right answer to bulk banner resizing is structural: "one master → batch adaptation", not "remake per size." A designer spending 10–20 minutes per placement turns thirty specs into a full day. This work — what agencies call adaptation — is the most automatable part of creative production: upload one master, specify the placement list, and dozens of sizes come back in about ten minutes.
Four requirements for bulk adaptation
- Element preservation: text, logos and products kept as original pixels, not regenerated — redrawn text multiplies your review burden by the size count.
- Platform specs applied automatically: not just dimensions but safe zones, file formats and size limits per placement guide.
- Arbitrary-ratio accuracy: non-standard ratios like 728×90 or 1029×258 must come out undistorted (see our distortion measurements — reject at 4%+).
- List input: presets and spreadsheet upload instead of clicking placements one by one.
Operations checklist
- Save frequent placement sets (e.g., Meta 6 + Google Display 10 + Kakao 4) as presets — repeat runs become one click.
- Same-ratio placements (350×100 and 700×200) should be generated once and losslessly downscaled — fewer distortion chances, lower cost.
- Review can shrink to one sample per ratio group + all safe-zone placements (if your tool doesn't geometrically guarantee safe zones, those need full review).
How ImageFactory solves this
This is exactly ImageFactory's structure: ① upload a master → ② pick from 1,400+ placements or bulk-load custom sizes via spreadsheet → ③ parallel adaptation with text/logo preservation → ④ safe zones and file specs applied automatically. Same-ratio groups reuse one generated master, safe-zone placements route to the guarantee strategy, and the same engine runs in the Figma and Photoshop plugins.