Image to 3D

Image to 3D — Convert a Photo Into a 3D Model

One image in, a textured 3D model out — reconstruct the shape you already have.

Create a 3D model

Image to 3D reconstructs a full 3D model from a single picture, inferring the unseen sides and wrapping it in PBR textures. Upload a product photo, a character sheet, or a piece of concept art and get a mesh you can rotate, refine, and export.

It's the quickest route when you already know what the object looks like. Vanikya previews the reconstruction live in the browser so you can check the silhouette before exporting to GLB, OBJ, STL, USDZ, or PLY.

What you get

  • Single-image reconstruction: One clean reference photo is enough to build a complete, textured 3D mesh.
  • Faithful textures: The model carries PBR materials inferred from the source image, not flat painted color.
  • Live preview: Orbit and zoom the reconstruction in your browser before spending a credit on the next variant.
  • Export anywhere: Download GLB, OBJ, STL, USDZ, or PLY for web, AR, game engines, or 3D printing.

How it works

  1. Upload an image — Add one clear reference photo of a single object on a clean background.
  2. Convert to 3D — The AI reconstructs the shape and wraps it in PBR textures in about a minute.
  3. Preview and export — Rotate the model in-browser, then export GLB, OBJ, STL, USDZ, or PLY.

Frequently asked questions

What kind of image works best for image to 3D?

A single, well-lit reference of one object on a clean background. Centered, unobstructed subjects reconstruct most reliably.

Do I need more than one photo?

No. The model reconstructs the unseen sides from a single image, though clearer references give cleaner results.

Can I edit the model after converting?

Yes. Export GLB, OBJ, STL, USDZ, or PLY and refine it in Blender or any DCC tool.

Is it free?

You get free credits on sign-up to try it. Further conversions use credits, with no subscription required.

Can I use the result commercially?

Yes, generations include cleared commercial usage rights.