Image Tool
AI image depth map generator
Upload one image and get a clean grayscale depth map for parallax animation, subtle 3D camera moves, depth-aware compositing, and relighting experiments.
Drop an image here or click to upload
Supports JPG, PNG, and WebP up to 10 MB. One image per request.
Original
Depth Map
What this tool does
Generate a depth map online without opening another app
An image depth map generator analyzes a flat image and estimates how near or far each region appears. The result is typically a grayscale map where brighter pixels indicate foreground depth and darker values represent background distance.
That extra depth information is useful in motion design because it lets you fake dimensional movement from a still image. You can push it into displacement effects, depth-aware blur, slight camera moves, layered composites, and other stylized 2.5D treatments.
The flow stays lightweight: upload once, generate, preview the result, and download the depth map. It is built for getting a usable depth pass fast without turning the page into a technical dashboard.
Under the hood, the tool uses Depth Anything 3 style metric depth estimation rather than a simple colorized preview. That gives Bento enough structured depth data to render a cleaner black-and-white map that feels more at home in creative pipelines.
FAQ
What is an image depth map?
A depth map is a grayscale image where brighter areas usually represent surfaces closer to the viewer and darker tones represent areas farther away.
What model powers this tool?
It uses Depth Anything 3 metric depth estimation for single-image scene analysis. Bento then converts that prediction into a clean black-and-white depth pass that is easier to use in motion-design workflows.
What kind of image works best?
Images with a clear foreground, visible subject separation, and decent contrast usually produce the most usable depth maps.
Where can I use the result?
You can use the output in After Effects, Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Photoshop, Blender, and other apps that support grayscale maps.