Do the featured images on your blog or website stand out? Are your social shares eye catching? Use these photo editors to create impressive images. They are good for general photo editing, too.

It is tempting to use stock photo libraries for the images on your blog or website, but they have little value when it comes to SEO and a photo Google or Bing has seen many times elsewhere just isn’t very interesting. Unique original images are preferred.

You don’t have to take all your own photos and you could take a public domain image and tweak it in a photo editor to create a new work of art, you could add special effects and filters to make it stand out. There are several free tools that you can use and here I take a look at some of them.

Adobe Photoshop Express

This is not Photoshop and apart from being a photo editor, it bears no similarity to Photoshop. However, it is free, it is excellent and you should have it on your Windows PC because it is a good tool for creating artwork for use online. Think of it as Photoshop reimagined and simplified.

Get Photoshop Express from the Windows 10 Store – just search for ‘photoshop’. It is also available on phones and tablets, too.

Everything you need is in a toolbar on the left and the icons enable you to fix problems in images, apply special effects, add borders and more. In the Basic section for example, is a collection of filters similar to those in photo apps for phones and in the Instagram app. One click on a thumbnail applies Vibrant, Autumn, Pastel, Haze, Silvered, Dappled, Glow and many other filters.

There are B&W (black and white), Portraits, Nature, Pop-colour and Duotone sections, each with lots of filters for adding colour effects to images.

The crop tool is clearly aimed at bloggers, website owners, and people on social media. Normally with a crop tool in a photo editor you specify the size or drag a box on the image. With Photoshop Express there are lots of ready-made sizes, such as Facebook Profile Cover, Facebook Page Cover, Facebook Ad, Instagram, Twitter Post, Pinterest, ETSY Cover and so on.

Click the social network image you want and the crop is overlaid on the image and it can be dragged to adjust the area selected.

There is a good range of photo correction tools and they are organised into categories like Light, Colour, Effects, and Details. Select any of these and thumbnails show all the different options. Click one and a slider on the image lets you adjust the strength, such as more or less contrast, increase or decrease clarity and so on.

This is a very good free tool for fixing photo problems like colour and exposure, for enhancing photos with special effects, and for cropping them to the exact size you need for various social networks. It does not do everything and it does not allow you to add text, such as for Pinterest images for example, but it is still excellent.

GIMP

GIMP is a traditional photo and image editing application for Windows and Mac computers and it looks like it was designed to offer a Photoshop-like experience for free. You would struggle to find a photo editor for free that is as powerful as GIMP.

The interface is a common one and there are floating windows that contain buttons for accessing tools and for adjusting the settings and parameters, like selection size, brush size, fill type and so on. It has a text tool that has a lot of options, such as font selection, size, character and line spacing, left/centre/right alignment, and so on. This is useful for creating images with text, such as for Pinterest.

GIMP features multiple layers, so you can build images from layer upon layer, and rearrange layers with drag and drop. Layers and many tools have transparency settings. The tools all work on selections on layers.

There is a good collection of tools for correcting and enhancing images, such as brightness, contrast, hue, saturation and adjustment of levels and histograms and lots of special effects.

There is a steep learning curve with GIMP and it can be confusing at first. However, as you learn it, it becomes quicker and easier to use. There are no special features for creating images for blogs, websites, social media and so on, but if you know what size image is required, it is a great tool.

PicMonkey

PicMonkey is an online photo editor that runs in a web browser on a Windows PC or Apple Mac and there is no software to install. Just go to the PicMonkey website and you can create or edit images. There are mobile apps for use on iPhones and Android phones too.

Start PicMonkey and you can choose from a blank canvas, a ready-made template, or you can upload a photo from your computer. Once loaded, the toolbar on the left provides access to Basic Edits, Effects, Touch Up, Text, Overlays, Frames and Textures.

Click any one of these and multiple tools are displayed and the range on offer is excellent. For example, in the Touch Up section are tools to remove blemishes and wrinkles, whiten teeth and apply fake tan, brighten eyes, ad mascara and many more.

Overlays add stars, lines, arrows, symbols, comic bubbles and many more items. There are dozens of filters, a collection of fonts for adding plain or fancy text and so on. Borders and textures can be used for special effects and they are easy to customise.

Of special interest for bloggers and social media are the templates. Click Open New or the t icon at the bottom of the toolbar and then click Category on the template screen. A little way down the screen is Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube and Twitter.

Select any of these and it has the exact sizes you need to create Facebook covers or post images, Pinterest pins, Twitter images and so on. Open one and you can edit it and make it your own.

PicMonkey is an excellent online editor and it can be used for free. However, to save edited images back to your computer, and therefore use them on your blog, website or social network, you need a paid subscription. It is reasonably priced and a Basic account is £9 a month. Photoshop costs slightly more, but some people prefer PicMonkey and the 1 GB of online storage and real-time collaboration and shared folders are useful. See features and prices at PicMonkey. (My affiliate link)

Canva

Canva is a popular choice for creating images for sharing on social media and blog posts. It runs in a browser window on your computer, Windows PC or Apple Mac, and you can use apps on your phone or tablet. It is free to use, but extra features, templates, photos and other things are available for a small fee.

You start by selecting a template and there is a wide range to choose from, like magazine covers, photo collages, CD covers, infographics, book covers, desktop wallpaper and many more.

There are also templates designed for social media like Twitter, Pinterest, and Facebook. Select one of these categories and there are dozens, perhaps hundreds, of ready-made templates to choose from. The list seems to go on and on.

After selecting a template, it has just the right dimensions you need and placeholder text, images and other items. These can all be customised and your own content can be added.

The Elements tab in the toolbar enables you to add photos, grids, frames, shapes, lines, illustrations, icons and more. Select one of these and there are huge libraries of items to choose from – one million images for example. There are free and paid items and both are clearly labelled so you can easily choose and keep it free or pay for higher quality items. Your own photos can be uploaded and used too.

The text tools are excellent and there are ready made headings, subheadings and text templates that can be dragged and dropped on the image. You then resized, select the fonts and colour, then edit the text and replace it with your own. Backgrounds can be added or replaces and there are many to choose from.

Canva is an excellent tool for preparing images for your website for sharing on social media and you can download and save the resulting images to your computer in several different formats.

PicsArt Photo Editor

PicsArt Photo Editor is an online editor that runs in a web browser so there is no software to install. The free version has a lot of features and might be all you need, but there is a Gold version with even more features for $3.99 a month. I tried the free version.

The home page lists 16 activities. Some of them can be seen in the screenshot above and there are another 12, such as Double Exposure, Color Exposure, Color Toning, Magic Effects and more. It is a bit different to a traditional photo editor and it is more of a tool for adding effects. It enables you to create fun images from your photos or from its own photo library.

Many tools work in a similar way and clicking an activity enables you to select an image from the PicsArt photo library or to upload your own. Just drag it from the computer’s drive and drop it on the browser to upload it. Thumbnail images in a sidebar show a variety of effects, sometimes dozens, and you just click the one you want. It depends on the effect, but there may be controls to adjust the application , like the amount of contrast, hue and saturation, the blend method and more. Files can be downloaded as JPG or PNG images.

The first of the activities is Template Editor and this one is a bit different to the others. It provides a collection of templates and you can choose from several Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest and YouTube sizes, like Instagram square or story, Facebook post or cover. You can then add photos, text, stickers, shapes and overlays, customising the template to produce your own unique image.

I found a few bugs in PicsArt, but on the whole, it is a good online tool for turning photos into exciting images for your website, blog or for sharing memes on social media. One of the activities is actually a meme generator. It’s fun and free.

More photo editors

There are many more offline and online photo editing tools that are great for creating Facebook cover images, Pinterest pins, and featured images for your website and here are just a few of them: