Well, you can do a bit of improving in Photoshop, or some other image editor BUT
Small picture (files) simply do not contain much picture information, hence the blurriness.
It's a bit like saying "I only have one cup of water, is there any way for me to take a bath?"
2007-08-31 18:57:39
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answer #1
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answered by Phoenix Quill 7
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I'm gonna assume here that you're using an opaque projector cuz most all opque projectors are fuzzy lookin when you enlarge pictures with them,........if this is the case,..try this, "isolate the projector so that no light comes from any part of it but the lens area,.........then this should make it posasibloe for you to see the details better. the best way however to enlarge a photo, you can take a photo of the photo using 35mm film, then have the film developed, find the negative in that film, place it in a 35 mm slide jacket and project it using a slide projector,.....almost no detail will be lost this way.......you can use color slide film or just regular film, either way, you have the details you'll need on the film. if you use the negative as a slide, just be well aware that it gets some taking used to enlarging this way. if you're trying to just make your photo clearer to see,.... you can use photoshop9 (PS9) and use the find edges programs to clear it up better, store it back on your computer and then print that puppy out on your printer.
2007-08-31 19:09:38
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answer #2
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answered by theoregonartist 6
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when you try to zoom in on a small photo, you are just expanding the pixels and if the pixels arent there.... theres noting to expand. so, when saving photos, try to save at the biggest you can.. if you are emailing them, then your forced to save small JPEG files and once saved, there is no way to blow them up again... now, they do sell software that can make the photos bigger and they work ok but, they are really expensive and its all they do, unlike photoshop wich does tons more (for the $$$)
2007-09-01 03:17:50
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answer #3
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answered by craig z 3
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You can use adobe photoshop to sharpen it. What it does is just blends the corners of the pixels.However there's no way to recreate the CSI effect where they take a tiny fuzzy picture and clear it up to picture perfect that is based on pure BS.
2007-08-31 18:53:58
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answer #4
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answered by quatin1 2
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If the photo was blurry when you took the photo. No way to sharpen it up.
2007-09-04 13:44:35
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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No!
do you have the orig anal still
you can re size it and make it bigger before you crop it that will make it better
2007-09-01 00:56:07
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answer #6
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answered by Mike 4
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