Use case

Clean Gemini client assets without uploading them.

Client concepts often contain unreleased ideas. GenClean keeps the image file local while giving you a clean export for reviews, decks, and handoffs.

Why privacy matters for client work

Agencies and freelancers frequently create moodboards, ad concepts, landing page visuals, and campaign drafts before a client has approved the direction. Uploading those drafts to another cleanup service can be a poor fit if the image includes product details, internal names, or sensitive concepts.

GenClean processes the image in the browser. The serverless side can check usage limits or Pro entitlement, but the image itself does not need to leave the machine.

Client-safe positioning

Use GenClean as a presentation cleanup step, not as a rights workaround. The safest client workflow is to keep originals, clean only generated images you are allowed to edit, and disclose AI generation when a contract, policy, or platform requires it.

This also makes review easier. If a client asks where an image came from, you can show the original Gemini export, the cleaned version, and the final asset used in the campaign or deck.

Why a local workflow matters for agencies and freelancers

Client assets often move through several approval stages before anyone knows what will be published. Early visuals may include product ideas, pricing concepts, campaign themes, internal positioning, or names that are not ready for public exposure. Sending those images to a generic remote cleanup service can add unnecessary risk.

GenClean keeps the actual image processing in the browser. The site can still verify free limits or Pro access, but the image pixels do not need to be uploaded for cleanup. That distinction is useful when you are trying to keep a workflow lightweight, private, and easy to explain to a client.

Recommended handoff process

  1. Confirm you generated or have permission to edit the image.
  2. Clean the visible Gemini mark locally.
  3. Export a PNG for review and keep the original in an archive folder.
  4. Label the asset as AI-generated where your client or platform policy requires it.

Pro batch cleanup for campaigns

For a campaign folder, batch cleanup reduces repeated manual work. Select all Gemini exports, process them locally, and download a ZIP. Review the ZIP before sending files to the client, especially if the watermark sat over textured backgrounds.

How to organize cleaned files

Use predictable names when handing files to clients. Keep originals in an `originals` folder, cleaned PNGs in a `cleaned` folder, and final designed assets in a separate `final` folder. This avoids confusion when several versions of the same image exist.

For a campaign, include notes about where the image came from and whether it is approved for external use. GenClean can help make a generated image look cleaner, but it cannot replace rights review, brand review, or AI disclosure decisions.

What to tell a client

The safest explanation is direct: the image was generated in Gemini, the visible corner mark was cleaned for presentation, and the file should still be treated as AI-generated where disclosure is required. This keeps the workflow transparent and avoids implying that GenClean changes the origin or rights status of the asset.

If the client plans to use the asset publicly, confirm the usage context before final delivery. A rough concept for an internal deck has different review requirements than a paid ad, landing page hero, or printed campaign. GenClean helps with presentation quality, but the project owner still needs to approve usage rights and brand suitability.

Agency review checklist

This checklist is intentionally practical. It keeps GenClean positioned as a workflow utility rather than a tool for bypassing rights, attribution, or disclosure obligations.

Important limitation

GenClean does not give you rights you do not already have. It only helps clean visible marks from images you own or have permission to edit. Keep your client agreements, AI disclosure requirements, and platform rules in mind.