About

Independent browser tools for practical file work

Kreativ Tools is a small independent website by Andrei Olaru, built to make common image, PDF, audio, video, font, and data tasks easier to complete in the browser.

Purpose

Useful tools with clear limits

The site focuses on real browser utilities: compressing images, arranging PDFs, converting audio, preparing fonts, and cleaning data files. The goal is to keep each page useful as a destination, not just as a doorway to another page.

Operator

Made by KREATIV and Andrei Olaru

Kreativ Tools is part of the independent KREATIV ecosystem, alongside creative assets and web resources. Support and privacy requests are handled through the contact channel listed on this site.

Browser-first

Most file operations are designed to happen locally in the browser where possible, reducing unnecessary uploads.

Outcome-led

Tools are organized around jobs such as make an image smaller, sign a PDF, merge files, or prepare a webfont.

Documented

Learn guides explain when to use a quick tool, when to use a guided workflow, and what limits to expect.

Page Quality

What useful tool pages include

Each priority page is meant to be useful before and after the file task. Tool pages explain the job, accepted formats, browser handling, common limits, and the related tool to try next.

How to read this site information

The trust pages explain ownership, contact paths, privacy limits, terms, and advertising separation. They are written to support real use of the tools, not to replace legal advice or platform-specific policy review.

If a file is sensitive, review the relevant tool page before using it and keep your own copy of the source file. If an ad, browser extension, or third-party page appears near the site in the future, treat it as separate from the tool controls unless it is clearly part of the Kreativ Tools interface.

After downloading the result, open it once before using it in a client send, upload form, website, or archive. This final check catches format support issues, unexpected file size changes, missing characters, clipped media, or page-order mistakes while the original file is still available.

If the output will be reused, note the settings that produced it. That makes the next export easier to repeat and reduces guesswork when another file needs the same treatment.