Workflow Guide
You can use Google Gemini to create great images for your website completely for free. This guide walks through the full workflow from generating the image to publishing it clean.
Why Use Gemini for Website Images?
Good website images make a real difference. They keep visitors on the page longer, make your content easier to understand, and give your site a more professional look. The problem is that sourcing quality images takes time and often money.
Google Gemini solves that. You describe what you need and it generates a custom image in seconds. It is free, you do not need any design skills, and the output quality is genuinely good. The only step you need to add to your workflow is removing the watermark before the image goes live.
The Full Workflow: From Idea to Published Image
Write a clear, specific prompt
Open Google Gemini and describe the image you want. Be specific. Include the subject, setting, lighting, style, and mood. The more detail you give, the better the result.
Example prompts:
"A clean, modern home office with a white desk, plant, and large window. Bright and airy feel."
"Flat design illustration of a person reading a book under a tree. Simple shapes, warm colors."
Generate and choose the best result
Gemini usually offers a few image variations. Pick the one that fits your content best. If none of them feel right, refine your prompt and try again. Small changes to your wording can produce very different results.
Download the image
Download your chosen image from Gemini. It will come with a watermark. That is fine, you will remove it in the next step. Save it as PNG if you have the option, since PNG gives the best quality for watermark removal.
Remove the watermark
Go to wr.imgplaceholdr.com and upload your image. The tool processes it locally in your browser in seconds. Preview the result, then download the clean version.
You can upload multiple images at once if you have a full set to process.
Resize and compress for the web
Before uploading to your website, resize the image to the dimensions your site actually needs. A 4000px wide image on a 800px column wastes bandwidth and slows your page down. Use a free tool like Squoosh to compress without losing visible quality.
Add alt text and publish
When you upload the image to your website, always add descriptive alt text. This helps with accessibility and SEO. Describe what is in the image in plain language. For example: "A bright home office with a white desk and green plant near a window."
Tips for Better Gemini Images
- Mention the aspect ratio in your prompt. Add "landscape format" or "square image" to get dimensions closer to what you need.
- Use style descriptors. Words like "photorealistic," "flat design," "watercolor," or "minimalist" give Gemini clearer direction.
- Avoid overly complex prompts. One clear scene works better than a long list of requirements. If you want multiple elements, keep them related.
- Iterate quickly. If the first result is not right, change one part of the prompt and try again. Small adjustments often make a big difference.
Common Questions
Does Google allow me to use Gemini images on my website?
Google's terms permit use of images generated through Gemini. You should check the current Gemini terms of service for your specific situation, as terms can be updated. Many creators also add a note that an image is AI-generated, which is good practice for transparency.
What format should I use for website images?
WebP is the best format for web use. It gives you smaller file sizes than JPG or PNG with similar visual quality, which means faster page loads. Our tool lets you download in WebP directly after removing the watermark.
Remove the Watermark and Publish Clean Images
Free, private, and done in your browser in seconds.
Try the Tool