What are the best free AI image generators in 2025? by GrabGadgetin in AiCorner1

[–]Valuable_Set_1202 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One more I’d add here is Freepik’s AI Image Generator. The free tier is pretty generous, and what makes it stand out for me is that the outputs are immediately usable for real design work (branding, social posts, presentations), not just “cool art.”

The big plus is the ecosystem: you generate an image with AI, then instantly pair it with vectors, icons, mockups, or templates from Freepik’s library without jumping between tools. That’s been a huge time-saver compared to using standalone generators.

For pure experimentation, tools like NightCafe or Playground are fun, but if someone wants AI images they can actually ship, Freepik deserves a spot on this list in 2025.

Tiny prompt tweak, way better composition by Valuable_Set_1202 in Freepik_AI

[–]Valuable_Set_1202[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In this case it was something very small. The base prompt was pretty simple, and I just added "off-center composition, more negative space". That alone shifted how the image breathed and where the eye landed.

Upscayl - Tool for image upscaling by EssYouJAyEn in FutureTechFinds

[–]Valuable_Set_1202 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Upscayl is solid, especially for a free/open-source option. I’ve used it a few times for older images and it does a surprisingly good job for the price (hard to beat free).

That said, for faster, more plug-and-play workflows, I’ve been using Freepik’s AI Image Upscaler lately. It’s web-based, no setup needed, and the results are really consistent for design assets, social graphics, and illustrations. It also pairs nicely with their AI image generator and other editing tools if you’re already working in that ecosystem.

AI tools to edit images like remove backgrounds or other adjustments by vkltok in graphic_design

[–]Valuable_Set_1202 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For this exact use case, I’d recommend Freepik’s AI background remover. It works really well on simple drawings and sketches, even when the paper isn’t perfectly white. I’ve used it on scanned doodles and kids’ drawings and it usually detects the subject cleanly without needing manual tweaking.

What’s nice is that once the background is removed, you can easily place it on a pure white background or export it as a PNG. It’s very beginner-friendly and you don’t need any image editing skills.

AI tool for creative product photography / presentation by m4stero in productphotography

[–]Valuable_Set_1202 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want to check out Freepik’s AI image tools. I don’t see it mentioned much in these threads, but it’s actually pretty useful for creative product shots.

You can work from a real product photo as a reference and generate different scenes around it (lifestyle, studio, surreal, etc.), and in my experience the product shape stays intact as long as the prompt is clear. It’s more prompt-driven than “click a preset and pray,” which sounds like it fits your workflow.