Most Effective Method to Reduce and Optimize PNG Images

Written by Kevin Liew on 10 Mar 2010
281,064 Views • Techniques

Introduction

Just recently, I was assigned to in charge of an iPhone game website. Due to the design, it needs heaps of png files so that I can use CSS to layer them together. It's quite a sophisticated website when it also come with a jQuery scrolling effect. I hope I can show it here, but it haven't released yet. :)

I like png, it supports by all the browsers (except IE6, but you have the hack anyway). Usually, I would use JPEG or GIF, but this time, most of the images has drop shadow and the background of the website is tiled with clouds. However, we're facing a problem, the file size of the PNG files are pretty massive. Though most of us has fast Internet, but it's good to optimized all the images to be as small as possible without losing quality.

One of my friend showed us this technique to reduce PNG file size and I was pretty amazed. All the time, the PNG optimizer is here with me. That's it, we're using Adobe Photoshop to do it. Of course, not the Save as web, just one more step, we can reduce PNG file size but still maintain its image quality.

So, Obviously, you need photoshop, not sure if Gimp have it.

Step 1: A PNG File

I choose an image randomly and this is it:

Optimize PNG - Choose a PNG file

Step 2: Posterize it

Go to the menu bar, Image -> Adjustment -> Posterize

Optimize PNG - Posterize option

Step 3: Posterize it

After you've clicked on Posterize, you should able to see a dialog . It has a slider for posterize level adjustment. Slowly adjust it to your desired quality. If you observed it carefully, you will able to see some colors are being discarded, and that's the way to reduce the file size.

Optimize PNG - Adjust posterize level

Step 4: Save as web

Okay, the final step - save your file. Go to File -> Save as web... Then, you've just optimized your PNG file! I believe your PNG file size is reduced.

Optimize PNG - Save as web

A small test

The following is some tests I have done to see how much file size it has reduced.

  • Optimize PNG - Save as web

    Original file - 147 KB

  • Optimize PNG - Save as web

    Web Optimized (Save as web without posterization) - 70 KB

  • Optimize PNG - Save as web

    Posterized and save as web - 53 KB

  • Optimize PNG - Save as web

    Posterized with slight losing of Image quality and save as web - 37 KB

Conclusion

There are a lot of softwares out there, but most of them couldn't do the job well. I still reckon we need human eyes to make sure we optimize the images properly without compromising too much of the image quality. This is a simple technique and I guess it's the most efficient and less time consuming. However, we do need Adobe photoshop or si image editor that has posterize or similar capabilities.

If you think, it's not worth it to run a big program just to do a small task, well, it works for me because I have photoshop running all the times. :) I hope it helps. Cheers.

If you have a better way to do it, don't forget to share it in the comment below :)

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71 comments
KC 13 years ago
Thanks for sharing :)
Reply
Miguel Tavares 13 years ago
Awesome, thanks alot for the tut!
Reply
T.Poikolainen 13 years ago
Unbeliavable! I did reduce my image from 190kb to 80kb! Thank you so much, great advice!
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Magda 13 years ago
that solution save my time!!!!Thank you:)))
Reply
Jil 13 years ago
It works. Thanks a lot.
Reply
Alan Brown 13 years ago
Thanks, great tip. I just shaved over 500kb off a large textured png. If you're in photoshop try adding a posterize adjustment layer to experiment with the quality, it must be the very top visible layer. For shadowed pngs you can add a mask to the adjustment layer to mask off everything but the shadow and it doesn't affect the file size too much.
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Michael Sheward 13 years ago
Thank you! You helped reduce the file size of most of my images i use! I run a web game and it uses PNG saved large map images, some of them are reduced by more than half and can hardly notice anything! Thank you!
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Brad 13 years ago
I've been searching the web for this solution and yours is the only one that works. Thank You!
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eatgeeks 12 years ago
well.... that was clever
Reply
saran 12 years ago
really u r great its simple and save my time gd job send some more tips of photoshop
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adam coulombe 12 years ago
incredible!! thanks a ton dude, great idea!
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Asim Raees 12 years ago
Great .... Thanks Buddy.
Reply
budyn 12 years ago
Photoshop posterizes poorly. Here's posterization with ImageAlpha pngmini.com: same quality as 37KB example, but has 30KB.

And even better, ImageAlpha medianCut cuts size to... drumroll... 14KB! *14*

http://i.imgur.com/T9To7.png (see size yourself)

http://i.imgur.com/T9To7.png
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