Upscale a Small Logo
When you only have a small version of your logo, the Logo Upscaler increases its dimensions while keeping edges sharp — no pixelation, no blurring.
About Upscale small logo
Small logos are a common problem. A logo downloaded from a website, exported from a legacy file, or extracted from a low-resolution document is often 100–300 pixels wide. Placing that file into a presentation, print template, or banner produces a visibly blurry result.
Standard image upscaling (nearest-neighbor or bicubic) increases pixel dimensions but does not recover missing detail — it just enlarges existing pixels, producing the blocky or blurry appearance that makes upscaled logos look unprofessional.
AI-based logo upscaling works differently. The model was trained on logo and graphic images and learns to reconstruct the edges, letterforms, and color regions that would be present in a higher-resolution version. The output is sharper and more accurate than any traditional algorithm.
Typical upscale factors: — 2× upscale: doubles width and height; suitable for moderate resolution increases — 4× upscale: quadruples dimensions; suitable for severely small source files — 8× upscale: extreme upscale; quality depends heavily on source image clarity
What makes a small logo upscale well: — Flat color regions (not photographic gradients) — Clean, non-compressed source (PNG preferred over JPEG) — High contrast between logo colors and background — Simple or medium-complexity shapes (complex fine detail may not fully reconstruct)
After upscaling, check that thin strokes and small text look clean at the target size. If the logo still shows imprecision for your use case, vectorizing it with the PNG-to-SVG converter produces mathematically perfect paths at any scale.