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AI Vectorizer

Vectorization tools have existed for decades. Illustrator's Image Trace, Inkscape's Potrace engine, and a long tail of online tracers all work the same way: scan the pixels, find color boundaries, wrap paths around them. They answer the question "where do the colors change?" — which is not the question a designer is asking. You want to know "what are the objects in this image, and can I edit them?"

An AI vectorizer answers that second question. Instead of edge-following, IntactSVG's model recognizes the image's actual structure — this is a rounded rectangle, that is lettering, this shape passes behind that one. The output is assembled from those recognized objects, which is why it doesn't degrade the way traced output does when images get complex or noisy.

The practical differences show up immediately. Traced results need cleanup: stray anchor points, jagged edges where anti-aliasing confused the tracer, one merged path where you wanted twelve shapes. AI-reconstructed results arrive organized — fewer, smoother paths and sensible shapes, with no threshold sliders to tune, because the model was never guessing at boundaries in the first place. The minutes you would have spent adjusting trace settings and untangling paths simply disappear from the workflow.

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How it works

1

Upload an image

PNG, JPG, or WebP — no pre-processing or settings required.

2

The model reads the structure

Objects, lettering, and stacking order are recognized the way a designer would see them.

3

Get a layered SVG

Organized, editable output with each recognized object on its own layer.

Occlusion reconstruction — the part tracing can't do

Here is a test no tracing tool passes: an image where one shape partially covers another. Image Trace and Potrace can only trace the visible pixels, so the covered shape comes out with a bite taken out of it, forever welded to its neighbor's outline. IntactSVG reconstructs the hidden geometry — the AI infers the occluded portion and emits the shape whole, on its own layer. Move the front object in Figma or Illustrator and there is a complete shape behind it, not a hole. If your goal is an SVG you can actually work with — recolor pieces, re-stack elements, reuse parts elsewhere — this is the capability that separates AI vectorization from auto-trace.

Frequently asked questions

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