A practical guide to turning image files into shareable URLs. Replace bulky attachments with one controlled link and keep review rounds easy to follow.

How to convert an image into a link is a sharing workflow: you host the file once, then distribute a single URL. That reduces attachment failures, keeps everyone on the same asset, and makes it easier to collect structured feedback when review matters.
Converting an image to a link means the file lives in cloud storage or a review workspace, and you share a URL that opens it. The link can be view-only, downloadable, or review-enabled depending on your tool and permissions.
One source of truth: fewer duplicate copies in inboxes and chat threads.
Controlled access: update permissions without re-sending the binary file.
Review-ready option: comments can stay pinned to the image instead of lost in email.
Attachments break when inboxes enforce size limits, when recipients use mobile data, or when teams lose track of which PNG was “final-final.” A link keeps delivery predictable and versioning easier to explain.
Reliable delivery: one URL instead of multiple failed sends.
Clear versioning: replace the underlying file or upload a new version in one place.
Centralized feedback: review links keep notes attached to the asset.
For the platform overview, see Image to Link.
Upload the image to a host or creative workspace that supports share links.
Set permissions for view, download, and (if needed) comment access.
Copy the share URL and paste it into your message with one clear call to action.
Test as a recipient in an incognito window to confirm access without your session.
Iterate on versions in the same workspace so feedback stays traceable.
State the intent: “review for approval” vs “quick glance” changes what people look for.
Time-box sensitive links: use expiration when the asset is confidential or campaign-bound.
Avoid link sprawl: retire old URLs when a new round starts so feedback does not split.
Pair with context: add brand, crop, or export notes so reviewers judge the right deliverable.
The interactive preview below shows a simple “copy shareable link” flow for an image asset. When you are ready, start a 7-day trial or book a demo.
Below are free tools that pair with image link sharing, plus related guides and platform features to explore next.
Try tools that complement link sharing, markup, and approvals.
Image Reviewer — Review images online with location-pinned comments, annotations, and approvals. Share with clients; recipients do not need a Kreatli account.
Image Annotator — Add location-pinned comments, highlights, drawings, and markup to images. Share with clients; recipients do not need a Kreatli account.
PDF Reviewer — Review PDFs online with location-pinned comments, annotations, and approvals. Share with clients; recipients do not need a Kreatli account.
Video Feedback Tool — Give frame-accurate feedback on videos with comments, annotations, and markup. Share review links with clients; recipients do not need a Kreatli account.
Read more about image review, sharing, and version-aware workflows.
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Proofing Software vs Production Management: Key Differences and the Best Choice for Creative Teams
Capabilities that support secure storage, image review, and structured approvals.
Annotate Image — Annotate and review images with comments and markup. Add feedback directly on images for precise, location-pinned review.
Secure Asset Storage — Enterprise-grade storage for creative assets. Organize files, track versions, and protect your media with reliable infrastructure.
Review & Approval — Frame-accurate revisions and approvals for video content. Streamline your feedback workflow.
How do I turn an image file into a link?
Upload the image to a host or review tool that generates a shareable URL, set permissions, then copy and send that link. Recipients open the image in browser instead of downloading an attachment.
Is an image link the same as hotlinking?
Not necessarily. Hotlinking usually means embedding someone else’s image on your site from their server. A share link is permissioned access to your file—often view-only or review-enabled—so you control who sees it.
Can reviewers leave feedback from an image link?
Yes, when you use a review-ready link. Stakeholders can open the image and leave location-pinned comments in one place instead of scattering notes across email.
How do I share an image link securely?
Use invite-only access when possible, add expiration for time-bound reviews, and test the link in an incognito window to confirm what recipients see without your login.
What happens when I upload a revised image?
With version-aware review, comments stay tied to the revision they were created on. Upload a new version when ready and resolve or carry feedback forward intentionally.
Reach us at support@kreatli.com and we will help you set up image link sharing for your team.
