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When is AI Image Upscaling Available 

AI image upscaling allows you to increase an image's resolution while preserving its original aesthetic. This is helpful when you want to use an image at a larger size without it appearing blurry or pixelated.
 

When to use this

Common use cases include:

  • Improving the quality of low-resolution images
  • Enlarging images for larger design areas
  • Preparing images for higher-resolution exports
  • Reducing visible pixelation when an image is scaled up

How it works

When AI upscaling is available, Design Huddle can generate a higher-resolution version of the selected image.

AI upscaling is only available when the original image is within the supported size limit. If either the image width or height is over 3,000 pixels, the image cannot be upscaled.

For example, an image that is 2,400 × 1,800 px is eligible because both dimensions are under 3,000 px.

An image that is 3,200 × 2,000 px is not eligible because the width is over 3,000 px.

The upscale option may also be hidden if the image is placed on the canvas at a size larger than the upscaled image can support. For example, if upscaling can generate up to about 4,000 px in width or height, and the image is being used larger than that on the canvas, the upscale option will not appear.

Low-quality image warning

You may still see the Fix Low Quality Images warning even when AI upscaling is not available.

This warning means the image may not have enough resolution for its current size on the canvas. However, if the image is too large to upscale, or if the canvas placement is larger than the upscaled image can support, Design Huddle may hide the upscale button in the left menu.

In this case, the warning can still help identify the image quality issue, but AI upscaling may not be an available fix.

Best practices

For best results, start with the highest-quality image available. AI upscaling can help improve resolution, but it works best when the original image is clear and not heavily compressed.

Before upscaling, check the image’s original pixel dimensions and its size on the canvas. This can help determine whether AI upscaling is available and whether it will improve the final result.