Permanent public URLs
Use a stable HTTPS image address that stays available after the campaign sends.
Upload newsletter graphics, product photos, and signature logos. Copy a permanent image link or ready-to-paste HTML, then use it in any email platform.
Use a stable HTTPS image address that stays available after the campaign sends.
Use a polished address such as email.yourbrand.com instead of a messy sharing link.
Copy the direct link or a complete, email-safe image tag with dimensions and alt text.
Keep headers, product images, signature assets, and transactional graphics organized by project.
Google Drive, Dropbox, and free image hosts are convenient until a permission changes, a sharing trick stops working, or your campaign image disappears. Infinite Uploads gives every email image a proper, permanent link with a web address you control.
<img
src="https://email.acme.com/welcome/header.jpg"
width="600"
height="300"
alt="Welcome to Acme"
style="display:block;
width:100%;
max-width:600px;
height:auto;
border:0;
outline:none;
text-decoration:none;"
/>Images behave differently inside an inbox than they do on a website. Infinite Uploads makes the safe choice for you and gives you guidance in plain English.
Recipients may reopen an email months later, so the image link cannot expire or require a login.
JPG and PNG are the safest choices. Use GIF only when the message truly needs animation.
Good alt text explains what the image shows when a person’s email app blocks pictures.
A 1,200-pixel source displayed at 600 pixels looks sharp on high-density screens without changing the email layout.
Once a campaign is sent, its HTML keeps the same URL. Do not delete the underlying image while that email matters.
Gmail, Apple Mail, and other inboxes may load images on someone’s behalf, which can make open counts misleading.
Host hero graphics, product grids, banners, and calls to action on permanent public URLs built for repeated inbox delivery.
Mailchimp · Klaviyo · Customer.io · custom HTMLKeep logos, receipts, onboarding illustrations, and lifecycle graphics outside the application server and close to every recipient.
Resend · Postmark · SendGrid · Amazon SESReplace fragile Drive and Dropbox sharing links with direct HTTPS images that work in Gmail, Outlook, and hand-coded signatures.
Logos · Headshots · Badges · Social iconsKeep email images with the rest of your brand, manage everything from one simple library, and reuse the right asset whenever you need it.
View simple hosting pricing →Everything that is different about putting a hosted image inside an inbox.
Use a permanent public link that opens the image itself without a login page or expiring permission. Infinite Uploads creates that link for you and can use your own branded web address.
Hosted images usually keep the message smaller and make reusable campaign assets easier to manage. Some security-sensitive messages may still use inline attachments, but most marketing and transactional templates work well with public hosted images.
No. Private links expire, but someone may reopen an email months later. An image inside an email should use a permanent public link.
JPG and PNG work most consistently, while GIF is useful for simple animation. Infinite Uploads keeps email images in a format that common inboxes understand.
Email clients and privacy services may proxy or cache remote images. That makes recipient-level image requests and open tracking unreliable, and it means you should keep sent image URLs public and avoid deleting the underlying asset.
Yes. Upload a logo, headshot, badge, or icon, click “Copy for email,” and paste the direct link into Gmail, Outlook, or your signature generator.
Start with every feature for seven days, including permanent links, ready-to-paste email HTML, and your own branded web address.