Over the years, I’ve had to replace so many online placeholder image services that I finally hit my breaking point. First, I used placeholder.com. Then, when the main site was replaced, their via service kept working—until it didn't. Other alternatives came and went, each disappearing when I needed them most.
There’s nothing worse than prepping a demo for a client and realizing all your placeholder images are broken because yet another service vanished overnight. Instead of finding yet another temporary fix, I decided to solve the problem for good.
I built my own placeholder image service, one designed to be reliable, open, and permanent. Not only is it freely available as a running service, but I also packaged it as a fully functional Docker image so anyone can build and deploy their own version, extend it, or contribute back. No more sudden outages. No more searching for alternatives. Just a simple, self-hostable solution that will always be there when you need it.
If you’ve ever been burned by broken placeholder images, check it out. Feedback and contributions are welcome!
Over the years, I’ve had to replace so many online placeholder image services that I finally hit my breaking point. First, I used placeholder.com. Then, when the main site was replaced, their via service kept working—until it didn't. Other alternatives came and went, each disappearing when I needed them most.
There’s nothing worse than prepping a demo for a client and realizing all your placeholder images are broken because yet another service vanished overnight. Instead of finding yet another temporary fix, I decided to solve the problem for good.
I built my own placeholder image service, one designed to be reliable, open, and permanent. Not only is it freely available as a running service, but I also packaged it as a fully functional Docker image so anyone can build and deploy their own version, extend it, or contribute back. No more sudden outages. No more searching for alternatives. Just a simple, self-hostable solution that will always be there when you need it.
If you’ve ever been burned by broken placeholder images, check it out. Feedback and contributions are welcome!
Add the details of the Docker image to the home page.
Good call, the details and a proper readme, here is the repo link for now: https://github.com/lets-qa/Image-Place-Holder-Service
I updated the home page to have the link to the github repo and then I also added a proper readme
https://iph.lets.qa
and
https://github.com/lets-qa/Image-Place-Holder-Service
Nice work and easy to use! Ive ben struggling trying to find a quick solution for my use case. Now I have it
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