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Increase Logo Resolution

Increasing a logo's resolution is not the same as simply making it larger. The Logo Upscaler uses AI to add pixels that sharpen detail rather than blur it.

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Logo Upscaler

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About Increase logo resolution

Resolution, in the context of raster images, means the number of pixels packed into a given area. A higher-resolution logo has more pixels per inch (PPI or DPI), which means more detail is available for display or print. A 72 DPI logo suitable for a website may be entirely unsuitable for a business card printed at 300 DPI or a banner at 150 DPI.

The difference between resolution and physical size: Resolution and physical size are related but separate. A 400×400 pixel logo at 72 DPI prints at approximately 5.5×5.5 inches at screen resolution but only 1.3×1.3 inches at 300 DPI print resolution. Increasing the DPI in metadata without adding pixels does not improve print quality — you need actual pixel data at the target size.

How AI upscaling increases resolution: Traditional interpolation (bicubic, Lanczos) estimates new pixel values by averaging neighbors. AI upscaling uses a neural network trained on logo images to predict what a high-resolution version of the image should look like — recovering sharp edges, clean color boundaries, and legible text that interpolation blurs.

When increasing resolution is the right choice: — You need a larger PNG file for a specific digital print order — Your printer reports a low-resolution warning — You need a higher-DPI source for embroidery digitizing — You are scaling a logo for a larger placement in a presentation or document

When vectorization is a better choice: — You need the logo to print at many different sizes without regenerating — You need infinite scalability for print, screen, vinyl, and embroidery — You want to edit individual colors or elements in design software

Use the Logo Upscaler above to increase your logo's resolution in one step.