Topaz Image Web adds batch uploads and My Files browser workflows
New creator demos show Topaz Image Web handling batch uploads, browser-side processing, and tools like Wonder 3, Denoise Max, Relight, and Background Remover without desktop installs. That matters because processing can continue after the tab closes and results stay accessible in a web file queue.

TL;DR
- Topaz moved its image enhancement stack into the browser, and topazlabs' launch post says models like Wonder 3 and Denoise Max now run through Topaz Image Web instead of a desktop install.
- According to AllaAisling's workflow breakdown, the web app now supports batch uploads, saves outputs to My Files, and keeps processing jobs alive even after you close the tab.
- The tool list in Anima_Labs' feature inventory spans Unblur, Colorizer, Background Remover, Relight, Face Enhancer, Autopilot, standard upscaling, Wonder 3, several sharpen modes, and multiple denoise modes.
- Hands-on creator posts split the product into two distinct behaviors: GlennHasABeard's Autopilot demo describes automatic repair for blur, grain, faces, and low resolution, while GlennHasABeard's Bloom Creativity post says Bloom is diffusion-based and deliberately reinterprets the image.
- On access, topazlabs' pricing post says web plans are 50% off at launch and existing Topaz Studio subscribers already have access.
You can jump straight to the product page, open the web app, and skim Topaz's broader company site. The useful bits are buried in creator demos: AllaAisling's thread shows the batch upload and My Files flow, carolletta's hands-on video walks through the unified workspace, and topazlabs' Expansion Release post ties the browser rollout to the wider May 7 release.
Unified workspace
Topaz Image Web looks like a consolidation play. carolletta's hands-on post calls it "one unified workspace" that folds Unblur, Wonder, Standard Upscaler, Denoise Standard, Sharpen, and more into a single browser app, with no more tab-switching.
Topaz's own framing in topazlabs' Expansion Release post is broader: the May 7 release added a new video model, new features, and expanded access across web and desktop apps. The browser part matters because topazlabs' browser launch post says Wonder 3 and Denoise Max are now available directly on the web.
Batch uploads and My Files
The cleanest workflow reveal came from AllaAisling's three-step walkthrough. It breaks the app into three actions:
- Pick a workflow, including Unblur, Sharpen, Denoise, and Relight.
- Upload your image, with batch processing supported.
- Download the result, or grab it later from My Files.
AllaAisling also notes in that same walkthrough that jobs keep running after the tab closes. That turns the browser app into more of a queue than a live editor.
The same browser-first pitch shows up in AllaAisling's launch post, which describes Topaz Image Web as "no installs" and "no desktop app," plus support for "any machine." For creators bouncing between laptops, client machines, and cloud desktops, that is the whole pitch in one line.
Tool stack
Anima_Labs' feature inventory is the best single list of what is already exposed in the web app. It includes:
- Unblur
- Colorizer
- Background Remover
- Relight Image
- Face Enhancer
- Autopilot
- Standard Upscaler
- Wonder 3
- Sharpen Standard / Auto
- Denoise Standard / Auto / Max
- Photo Restoration
- Creative Upscale
Separate demo posts in Anima_Labs' upscaler example, the background remover example, the relight example, and the colorizer example suggest Topaz is pushing the app as a multi-step enhancement hub, not just a one-click upscaler.
Autopilot and Bloom
Creator demos make a useful distinction between Topaz's corrective modes and its more generative ones. In GlennHasABeard's Autopilot post, Autopilot is described as "set-it-and-forget-it": drop in a render, let it detect grain, blur, soft faces, and low resolution, then let Face Recovery handle the fix. The specific example there took 592x448 inputs to 2368x1792 outputs.
Bloom behaves differently. GlennHasABeard's Bloom Creativity post says it is built for AI art, is diffusion-based, and "doesn't upscale, it reinterprets," with examples including opened eyes, added suction cups, and fuller fur. That is a sharper framing than Topaz's marketing copy, because it tells you Bloom can change content, not just clean it up.
Access and launch pricing
Topaz paired the browser launch with a launch discount. In topazlabs' pricing post, the company says web plans are currently 50% off and that current Topaz Studio subscribers already have access.
The linked Topaz Image Web page and app signup flow add a few concrete details. The signup summary attached to carolletta's prelaunch link post describes a 7-day trial with 50 free credits, automatic conversion to a paid subscription unless canceled, and a required payment method up front. The plan summary attached to topazlabs' launch pricing post also lists cloud-specific limits like concurrent renders and export caps, which makes the browser product feel more like a subscription service than a thin wrapper around the old desktop apps.