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Pixel Flow user manual and best practices

Find scanning, filtering, image details, library, export, account, and industry workflow guidance by task.

Feature Overview

Pixel Flow is a Chrome side-panel tool for capturing, analyzing, organizing, downloading, and recording source clues for images on web pages. This overview keeps the public links focused on the first confirmed documentation set.

Pixel Flow at a Glance

AreaMain entryBest forNotes
Entry pointsBrowser toolbar and page context menuOpening Pixel Flow from the current pagePixel Flow works when you actively open it or use the context menu.
Capture workflowCapture Page Images in BulkScanning, filtering, previewing, selecting, downloading, and exporting imagesSome batch actions may depend on PRO or quota state.
Image reviewAnalyze One Image and Its SourceChecking dimensions, format, source URL, EXIF, AI clues, and AIGC parametersAnalysis results are clues, not reuse permission.
Current page actionsManage Current Page ImagesStarting from the page context menuUseful when you are already working inside a specific page.
Account helpInvite Code and Referral Rewards and Contact SupportReward records, issue reporting, and support handoffInclude account, browser, and page context when reporting issues.
Data protectionData Safety Notice and Data Backup and ImportAvoiding local data loss before uninstalling, reinstalling, or switching devicesBack up before changing browser or extension data.

Common Starting Points

  1. For your first run, start with First Session in 3 Minutes.
  2. If you are not sure where to begin, read Where Should I Start?.
  3. To collect images from a web page, go to Capture Page Images in Bulk.
  4. To inspect image source and technical details, go to Analyze One Image and Its Source.
  5. To compare access tiers, read Free vs Pro.

Permission and Data Boundaries

Pixel Flow helps preserve source URLs, page context, download history, and exported records, but those records are review clues, not copyright permission. Before publishing, client delivery, commercial use, redistribution, or dataset preparation, separately confirm image rights, website terms, publicity rights, trademark limits, and your internal review rules.

Library items, tags, download history, and some settings mainly rely on local extension data in the browser. Before uninstalling the extension, clearing browser data, reinstalling Chrome, or moving to a new device, export a backup package.