Download Product Images for Dropshipping in Bulk
Product photos are the bottleneck, not the listings
If you run a dropshipping store, you already know the grind. Every supplier product page has a handful of images you need, and you might be importing dozens of products a week. Saving each photo by hand and then renaming it to fit your catalog is the kind of busywork that eats an afternoon. Bulk Image Downloader From URL List is a Chrome extension that collapses that job into a repeatable batch. There is nothing to install beyond the browser extension, and the whole flow runs client-side in Chrome.
Pull images from one product or a whole batch
For a single product page, open the side panel and run Deep Scan. Supplier pages love lazy loading and image carousels, so the deep scan’s scroll-and-wait behavior catches the full gallery rather than just the first hero shot. If you are onboarding many products at once, collect the product page URLs into a list, paste them into the bulk URL box or load a .csv, set a Delay so you do not overload the supplier site, and run Scrape from list. Every product page feeds into one results set.
Filter out the clutter
Supplier pages are full of images you do not want: trust badges, payment icons, related-product thumbnails, and banner ads. In the Filters tab, set a minimum width and height to drop the small stuff, then keep only the file types you use. The aspect ratio filter is handy when you want clean square shots for a product grid. The domain include and exclude fields help you keep only the supplier’s own image host and skip third-party widgets. Apply the filters and the grid narrows to the actual product photos.
Rename for your catalog automatically
This is where the real time savings show up. Files named like p_4821_thumb.jpg are useless in a catalog. The filename constructor builds names that fit your store. Drag segments into the order you want — a product name token, a sequence number with a fixed pad width, a timestamp — and the files arrive named consistently. Even better, if you maintain a spreadsheet of SKUs, you can upload a CSV or TXT of custom filenames, one per row, aligned to the URL order, so each image lands with the exact name your import expects. Filename cleanup rules strip leftover prefixes and junk characters before the name hits disk.
Convert and organize before import
- Convert everything to a single format. If your store standardizes on JPG or WebP, set the conversion once and every file matches.
- Resize to a catalog-friendly maximum so you are not importing 5000-pixel originals into a storefront that only needs 1200.
- Strip EXIF to remove supplier camera metadata before the images go public.
- Save into a folder per product, or wrap a product’s images in a ZIP for easy handoff.
Once a task is dialed in, save it and reuse it for the next supplier. You can export your task setup as CSV and import it again later, so your second store or your virtual assistant starts from the same proven configuration. For a business where margins depend on moving fast, turning product-image prep into a one-click batch is worth setting up properly once.
