Build tokens in Token Maker without leaving the browser
Token Maker is designed for quick portrait framing, not a long image-editing session. Drop art in, recenter it, and export fast.
Browser token workshop
Token Maker lets you upload character art, crop it in the browser, add masks, borders, text, and export clean PNG tokens without opening a heavy graphics suite. The Token Maker editor stays front and center, with format guides, FAQs, and practical references close by when you need them.
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Token Maker is designed for quick portrait framing, not a long image-editing session. Drop art in, recenter it, and export fast.
Token Maker lets you use a circular portrait inside a heavy frame, move to a square crop for handouts, or build hex counters for strategy overlays.
The Token Maker editor is aimed at DnD, Roll20, Foundry VTT, and similar tabletops where clean transparent PNGs matter more than filters.
Token Maker preset groups make it easier to keep monster sets, NPC portraits, and faction markers visually consistent across a campaign.
Template directory
Best for character portraits, NPC heads, and classic VTT avatar circles.
Create round tabletop tokens for DnD, Roll20, and Foundry VTT with browser-based cropping, border controls, and PNG export.
Best for grid-aligned markers, sci-fi portraits, and handout style tokens.
Build square map tokens for grid-based tabletop play, handout markers, and UI-aligned NPC portraits.
Best for hex maps, strategy overlays, and board-game style counters.
Create hex-shaped counters for strategy overlays, war game maps, region markers, and hex-based VTT encounters.
Workflow Guides
Learn a lightweight token workflow that keeps portraits readable on crowded maps without overbuilding borders or exporting needlessly large files.
Platform Guides
Use consistent masks, border families, and export rules so your Foundry VTT tokens feel like one campaign asset set instead of a pile of mismatched portraits.
Platform Guides
Build Roll20 tokens with closer crops, clearer borders, and practical export settings so players can recognize units immediately in busy encounters.
Export Strategy
Use 512 for active play, move to 1024 for long-term libraries, and reserve 2048 for premium assets or special cases.
Use local files in Token Maker, then frame the subject with wheel zoom and drag positioning until the face reads clearly at token scale.
Choose a circle, square, or polygon crop, then combine it with a border style that fits the role, faction, or encounter tier.
Download a clean PNG from Token Maker and move straight into Roll20, Foundry VTT, Owlbear, or any other map workflow that accepts image tokens.
Token Maker is a browser tool for turning character art, monster portraits, and NPC avatars into tabletop tokens with masks, borders, text, and PNG export.
The default workflow is local-first. Images can stay in the browser while you crop and export, which is useful for private campaign art or paid commissions.
Token Maker export is aimed at popular VTT setups such as Roll20, Foundry VTT, Owlbear Rodeo, and similar tools that accept PNG tokens.
Yes. Token Maker already supports circle, square, hexagon, octagon, decagon, and dodecagon style masks so you can match the board you are building for.
Yes. Token Maker supports custom border and mask uploads so you can align the token look with a homebrew setting, paid art pack, or campaign identity.
Token Maker works well at 512 for most tables. Move to 1024 or 2048 when you need sharper marketplace assets, premium handouts, or future-proof library files.
Local processing first
Drop in character art, crop it, add masks and borders, and export a clean PNG in Token Maker without sending the image elsewhere first. When you need more direction, move into Token Maker template pages, blog posts, or the FAQ.
Token Maker templates
Jump into the right Token Maker setup for circle, square, hex, monster, or transparent tokens.
Token Maker blog
Read practical Token Maker guides for VTT prep, Foundry VTT, Roll20, and export decisions.
Token Maker FAQ
Find Token Maker answers about exports, privacy, formats, and tabletop compatibility.