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Fix blurry photos instantly with our powerful image unblur tool. Remove blur caused by camera shake, motion blur, focus issues, or handheld shooting without losing important details. Our advanced deblurring algorithm analyzes the blur patterns and intelligently reconstructs sharp, clear images. Whether you have an old blurry photo, a motion-blurred action shot, or an out-of-focus image, our free online unblur tool can help you recover crisp, clear pictures. Upload your blurry image and let our technology restore clarity.
Recover sharpness from photos taken with unsteady hands. Perfect for low-light photography.
Clarify action shots and moving subjects. Save photos from sports events or wildlife photography.
Fix out-of-focus images caused by incorrect autofocus. Recover detail from shallow depth of field mistakes.
Make blurry scanned photographs clear again. Perfect for digitizing old family albums.
Upload any blurry photo you want to sharpen and clarify. Our tool works with photos affected by motion blur, camera shake, or out-of-focus shooting. Accepts JPG, PNG, and other common formats.
Set the enhancement level from 1-10 based on the severity of blur. Lower levels (1-3) provide subtle improvements for mildly blurred images, while higher levels (7-10) work best for significantly blurred photos.
Click Unblur to start the analysis. The system identifies the blur pattern, estimates the original sharp image, and reconstructs details. The process typically takes just seconds.
Preview the clarified result and compare with the original using our Before/After slider. Download your sharp, clear image in full resolution or share directly.
Camera shake and slight motion blur from indoor photography with a phone is actually pretty fixable. Set the enhancement level to around 5-7 and see what happens. The system will analyze the blur patterns and try to reconstruct the details. Obviously it cannot add information that was never captured, but it can often recover enough clarity to make the photo usable. Share the before/after with grandma - she will appreciate it.
Motion blur happens when something in the frame was moving while the photo was taken - like a fidgeting toddler, a flowing waterfall, or someone walking. The camera captured the subject in multiple positions during the exposure, creating that streaky look. Camera shake blur is different - that is when the entire frame is slightly doubled because your hands moved. Focus blur is when the camera focused on the wrong thing. Our tool handles all three, but motion blur is trickier because the subject literally moved during the shot.
Handheld camera shake is actually the best-case scenario for our unblur tool. It is a relatively uniform blur across the entire image, and the system can usually analyze the patterns and reconstruct a sharper version fairly well. Enhancement level 3-5 should give you noticeably better results without looking over-processed.
Yeah, that can happen and it is usually not the tool is broken. Some photos are just too far gone. If the blur is severe - like someone was really moving fast, or the photo is heavily out of focus - there is only so much we can do. Also, very small photos (like screenshots or heavily cropped images) have limited information to work with. Try enhancement level 8-10 on a larger image first to get a feel for what the tool can do.
Scanned documents with blur from the scanning process? Yes, that can definitely be improved. Use a lower enhancement level (3-5) to start - you want to sharpen the text edges without creating weird halos around the letters. It works best on documents where the original was clear but the scan introduced blur. If the original newspaper was already low-quality, results will be more limited.
Traditional sharpen tools like Photoshop unsharp mask work by increasing contrast along edges - they do not actually recover lost detail. Our approach actually tries to figure out what the original sharp image probably looked like and reconstructs it. Think of it as intelligent guesswork rather than just pumping up the contrast. The results are usually significantly better than traditional sharpen, especially for moderate blur.
That depends on your settings and the original photo. Low enhancement levels (1-3) give subtle improvements that look completely natural. Medium levels (4-6) show more improvement but might have some artifacts in very detailed areas. High levels (7-10) are powerful but can start to look weird on some photos - kind of like a fever dream. Use the preview slider to find the sweet spot for your specific photo.