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  1. Home | Playground AI Help Center

    Playground AI Help Center For questions and support, email us at support@playgroundai.com.

  2. Playground - AI Graphic Designer - FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

    Answers to questions frequently asked by users

  3. How does copyright work? Do I own the designs I create? | Playground …

    Information about copyright, image ownership, and customer rights

  4. What are the limits on the Free plan? | Playground AI Help Center

    Playground v3: 10 image edits every 3 hours OpenAI 4o/Seedream/Nano Banana: 3 image edits per month Downloads: 10 designs per day Features: Background removal and upscaling are only …

  5. How do I remove the background of a design? | Playground AI Help …

    Background removal to create transparent asset Note: Pro users have unlimited ability to remove the background of designs, but this feature is not available to Free users.

  6. How many images or edits under the paid plans (Pro, Day Pass)?

    We set these limits to ensure Playground can be made available to many people to try for free, while allowing paid users to have a predictable experience. These measures are crucial for maintaining a …

  7. How do I cancel my paid subscription? - Playground

    Note: After you cancel your paid subscription, you will still be able to access previously created images and continue to have a Free plan with Playground. Your account will remain active under the Free …

  8. Playground - AI Graphic Designer - User Guidelines

    For questions and support, email us at support@playgroundai.com.

  9. Where can I find my saved designs? | Playground AI Help Center

    Each time you click on a Template or create a new design, it begins a project file. Your designs are saved in a project file on the My Designs page which is located on the left side bar.

  10. What DPI can I print by design at? | Playground AI Help Center

    Use this formula: Print size (in inches) = Pixel dimensions ÷ DPI 🖼 Example If you generate a 1024 x 1024 image and upscale it 4x to 4096 x 4096 pixels using Playground, here's the math: 4096 ÷ 300 DPI = …