Enhance a Blurry Logo
A blurry logo loses its professional impact. The Logo Upscaler uses AI to sharpen edges and recover fine detail, turning a degraded logo file into a clean, usable image.
About Enhance blurry logo
Logo blur most often comes from one of three sources: compressing a JPEG, scaling up a low-resolution raster image, or extracting a logo from a PDF or screenshot. In each case, the original pixel edges have been smoothed or averaged, and the sharp boundaries that define a professional logo have been lost.
AI-enhanced sharpening reconstructs those edges. The model identifies regions that should be sharp — letter outlines, shape boundaries, color transitions — and rebuilds them with higher precision. The result is not simply higher contrast (which sharpening filters provide) but genuine edge recovery based on understanding what logo shapes look like.
Common sources of blurry logos and how to treat them: — Compressed JPEG logo: JPEG compression introduces color artifacts at edges. Upscaling after JPEG decompression can remove some artifacts and restore cleaner boundaries. — Screenshot or screengrab: the source resolution depends on your screen DPI. Retina screenshots are better than standard ones. Upscale the screenshot to 2× or 4× for better quality. — Logo extracted from PDF: PDFs sometimes embed low-resolution preview images rather than vector art. Extract the embedded image at the highest available resolution before upscaling. — Zoomed-in crop of a larger image: if the logo was cropped from a photo, upscaling can improve clarity but cannot recover detail that was not present in the original.
After enhancing with the upscaler, evaluate the result at your intended output size. For logos used at very large sizes (posters, banners, vehicle wraps), vectorization remains the most reliable solution for achieving perfect quality at any scale.