Image to bead pattern tool

What Is a Beadifier?

Have a photo, drawing, icon, or sprite you want to build with beads? A beadifier turns that image into a bead-by-bead plan you can edit, print, and follow at your craft table.

Start with a clear source image, generate a small first version, then refine the bead colors and grid before printing.

Start path

Image -> grid -> printable guide

Use Beadify when you want the pattern, colors, and counts to be clear before you start placing beads.

Source image

Photo, sprite, logo, drawing, or icon.

Pattern output

Bead grid, palette, count, and print guide.

Next step

Open the image-to-pattern tool.

Start with the image you want to make

You bring the picture. The tool helps translate it into a grid, bead colors, and a making guide that is easier to follow than guessing from the original image.

Choose a source image

Use a pet photo, character art, game sprite, logo, drawing, or simple reference image as the starting point for the pattern.

Turn colors into bead colors

The image colors are matched to fuse bead palettes such as Perler, Hama, Artkal, or similar brands so the pattern uses real bead choices.

Make from a clear guide

The result should give you a bead grid, color legend, bead counts, and printable layout instead of leaving you to count pixels by hand.

What you can do after conversion

The first generated grid is only the starting point. A good bead pattern needs the right size, readable details, usable colors, and a clean guide before you start placing beads.

Set a workable pattern size

Create a bead-sized grid that fits the project you want to make, from a small test pattern to a larger multi-board design.

Clean up the automatic result

After conversion, adjust individual beads, simplify noisy details, and make important shapes easier to see before printing.

Match beads you can actually use

Use bead names, color IDs, counts, and palette choices to plan the pattern around the beads you have or plan to buy.

Print a making sheet

Export a guide with a numbered legend, bead count, board layout, and printable pattern view when the design is ready.

Try a small version first

A small pattern helps you check whether the image, bead palette, and final style work before you spend time on a larger build.

Keep editing when needed

Save the project when you want to come back later, refine the pattern, or keep multiple versions of a larger bead design.

When you need a pattern you can make now

The fastest path is to work from the image itself: upload it, generate a new bead grid, and save the result as an editable Beadify pattern.

Start from the source image

If you still have the photo, drawing, or reference file, you can use it to make a fresh bead pattern without needing to rebuild the design by hand.

Keep the new version editable

After generating the grid, save the project so you can adjust colors, board layout, and individual beads before committing to the final printout.

Print only after cleanup

Check the legend, bead count, and important details first. A few edits before printing can save a lot of sorting and rework later.

Make the pattern in Beadify

The workflow is simple: upload the image, generate a starting pattern, improve the grid, then print or export the guide when it is ready to make.

01

Upload an image

Open the image-to-bead-pattern tool and upload a photo, drawing, pixel art reference, or other source image.

02

Generate a starting pattern

Create a small printable fuse bead pattern first, then use the editor for cleanup and color decisions.

03

Edit before printing

Adjust boards, bead colors, inventory filtering, and individual cells before you rely on the pattern for assembly.

04

Export when ready

Use the print and PDF path when the pattern is readable, the color legend is usable, and the bead count matches the project.

Beadifier FAQ

Short answers for makers who want to turn an image into a bead pattern and are checking the Beadifier spelling.







Turn an image into a bead pattern

Start with a photo, generate a small printable pattern, then refine the result in the Beadify editor.