Description from extension meta
Convert any image into text-based ASCII art directly in the Browser.
Image from store
Description from store
ASCII Art Generator is a lightweight browser extension that turns any picture on your computer into beautifully structured text-based art, right from the browser. In an age dominated by ultra-high-resolution graphics, ASCII art still holds a special charm: it evokes early computer culture, communicates ideas in environments that only support plain text, and makes ordinary images playful and eye-catching.
Why install it?
Creativity on demand: Whether you’re designing a Twitch overlay, building an email campaign that needs to stand out, or printing T-shirts in retro style, ASCII Art Generator lets you prototype ideas instantly without reaching for bulky desktop software.
Offline freedom: Because it uses vanilla JavaScript, HTML, and Canvas only, the extension works even when you have no internet connection. It’s perfect for students on locked-down lab machines or developers coding on flights.
Zero permissions, zero risk: The manifest requests no host permissions, no file-system hooks, and no remote code; it simply opens its own page and processes images you supply. Security-conscious users can install with confidence.
One-click export: Direct clipboard copy means you can paste artwork straight into Slack, Discord, or a Markdown file. The plain-text download ensures long-term archival without proprietary formats.
Adjustable quality: The width slider and inversion toggle offer control without overwhelm, so beginners get good results immediately while power users can fine-tune output for large banners or delicate line art.
Who is it for?
Developers & DevOps engineers who decorate README.md files, commit messages, or terminal dashboards with ASCII logos.
Graphic designers seeking quick prototypes for old-school posters, pixel-art mood boards, or glitch aesthetics.
Educators & presenters who want a memorable way to introduce image processing, character encoding, or digital history in the classroom.
Social-media managers crafting distinctive posts that survive plain-text platforms like Reddit comments, Mastodon, or SMS marketing.
Retro-computing enthusiasts chasing the nostalgia of BBS art and early demo-scene culture.
Accessibility advocates exploring alternative, text-only representations of visual content.