Have you ever had one ...
Have you ever had one of those moments – to create a single image, you have to switch back and forth between four or five websites: one for background removal, one for upscaling, one for object removal, and another for background generation – each requiring separate uploads, separate waits, and separate downloads?
I have. And every time, I feel like a factory worker on an assembly line, doing repetitive work until I question my existence.
Last month, I needed to create a set of product detail pages. The product photos were decent, but the backgrounds were too messy and needed removal, the resolution was too low and needed upscaling, there was a glare spot that needed removing, and I also needed to generate a few images with different scenes for comparison. Background removal on one site, upscaling on another, object removal on yet another, and scene generation on still another – I spent an entire afternoon going back and forth, with not much to show for it except over a dozen open browser tabs. At that moment, I truly felt that having too many tools can sometimes be more frustrating than having none at all.
Later, a friend in e‑commerce told me: "Try 360 Zhihui – one website does it all."
One website? Does it all?
One website? Does it all?
I thought to myself, I've seen plenty of these "all‑in‑one" tools – either they're missing features, or each feature is only half‑baked. But since I had nothing to lose, I searched for it and opened the platform.
And then, I was proven wrong. Completely.
It packed almost every image‑processing feature you could think of into a single page. AI background removal, 4K lossless upscaling, AI object removal, AI product photography, image‑to‑video, text‑to‑video, special effects, magic styles, AI image enhancement, AI watermark removal, AI ID photos, text‑to‑image – I counted at least 12 features listed on the homepage alone.
I uploaded that produc...
I uploaded that product photo and started with background removal – within seconds, the subject was precisely cut out. Then I clicked upscaling – within seconds, it became 4K HD. Then I clicked object removal – and removed a small unwanted object that had accidentally entered the frame. Everything was done on a single page – no switching, no re‑uploading, no waiting around.
How should I describe that feeling – it's like having to get five stamps from five different departments, only to find one counter that handles everything, with no queue.
Of course, failures happened too. Once I tried its "AI Product Image" feature – I uploaded a white‑background cup and wanted to generate a "scene image of it on a wooden table in a coffee shop." Instead, the AI gave me an image of the cup floating in mid‑air, with a weird shadow underneath. The dissonance was like seeing a cup flying around in a café. Later I realised that choosing the right scene template is far more important than blindly clicking generate – it has various built‑in e‑commerce scenes, and with the right selection, it's basically one‑click perfection.
But what truly blew my mind wasn't these basic features.
You know what surprise...
You know what surprised me most about 360 Zhihui? It's not just an "image processing toolbox" – it also integrates with 360's copyright image library. This means you can directly check copyright information for images you generate or process. Haven't we seen enough cases of people being sued for using images grabbed from search engines? Having a tool that also lets you check copyright at least lets you sleep at night.
And that "Release image copyright query" feature – although it currently only supports single‑image queries, the direction is right. For anyone who frequently creates or sources images, this feature is bound to become an essential need.
As for pricing – here's the key part. I haven't calculated 360 Zhihui's exact pricing model, but 360's products have always followed the style of "free features are generous, paid features aren't expensive." For everyday use, basic functions like background removal, upscaling, and object removal are essentially free. Even if you need to pay for heavy usage, it's at the level of "the cost of one takeout meal."
Finally, let me give you some honest advice, purely as a friend –
If you're like me &nda...
If you're like me – switching between four or five websites just to create one image – don't hesitate, just search for "360 Zhihui" and give it a try. Don't dismiss "all‑in‑one" tools as gimmicks – this one really does pack all the commonly used features into one place. Start with the most frequently used functions like background removal, upscaling, and object removal – you'll find that improving efficiency isn't always about honing your skills; sometimes it's about opening fewer web pages.
The only thing I need to warn you about – don't open it late at night planning to "try a couple" and then get hooked and not stop. I did that last week – I uploaded every photo on my phone and removed the backgrounds from all of them. The next day I went to work with dark circles under my eyes. When my colleague asked if I'd been up all night retouching images, I was too embarrassed to admit I'd been "playing on one website all night."
Efficiency shouldn't be imprisoned by the number of tools – if you're constantly switching back and forth, it's not your speed that's the problem – it's that you hadn't found the "one‑stop" tool sooner.
Go search for it, give it a try. And then you'll discover that the door to "image processing" now not only saves you from switching tools – it even checks the copyright for you.