Logo Upscaler for Business Cards
Business card printers require logos at 300 DPI or higher. If your logo file is too small, the upscaler increases resolution to print-ready quality without visible blurring.
About Logo upscaler for business cards
Business card printing has specific resolution requirements that most downloaded logo files do not meet. Printers like Vistaprint, MOO, GotPrint, and local print shops require raster images at a minimum of 300 DPI at the output size. For a business card logo region of roughly 1.5×1 inches, that means your logo PNG should be at least 450×300 pixels — and ideally larger for retina output.
The problem: logos downloaded from websites, sent over email, or found in Google Images are usually 72–96 DPI screen-resolution files. Uploading these directly to a print template produces a blurry result, and many printers will flag a low-resolution warning or simply print the file as-is.
What the Logo Upscaler does: The upscaler applies AI-based super-resolution to increase pixel dimensions while reconstructing sharp edges. It is optimized for logo characteristics — clean lines, text, flat color regions — rather than photographic texture. The output PNG is significantly larger and sharper than a standard bicubic resize.
Workflow for business card preparation: 1. Upload your logo PNG to the upscaler. 2. Download the high-resolution output. 3. Open the PNG in your business card template (Canva, Adobe InDesign, Vistaprint designer, etc.). 4. Resize within the template to fit the logo area at 100% — it should now be sharp. 5. Check the DPI indicator in your design software; it should show 300 DPI or above at the placed size.
If your printer still requests a vector file, use the PNG-to-SVG converter to generate an SVG from the upscaled PNG.