Make your products stand out by creating depth on your professional pictures. No need of camera or expensive tools to create outstanding commercial photography. Blurring the background enables to focus on the product and increase sales. We also offer an API solution for professional.

Customize the blurred background with different blur options. Adjust blur intensity or simply choose a different effect in the blur gallery, like the motion blur or the bokeh one. Adding a blurred background for businesses can create a professional and visually appealing effect that helps highlight the subject, convey a sense of depth, and draw attention to important elements in the foreground.


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Simply upload your image, and the PhotoRoom App's editor will automatically open, adding the blur directly to your image. The editor gives you also the ability to edit, resize your image or add any template. This application is free and available online.

No, tools like Photoshop are no longer necessary to blur the background of your image. Free online tools, such as the PhotoRoom App, can easily blur the background of your photos within seconds and without any prior knowledge.

No, nowadays you do not need expensive equipment to achieve stunning results in photo editing. Modern photo editing applications can blur the background of any picture without requiring prior experience. You can even upload and batch-edit multiple pictures at once.

Blurring the photo background for professional purposes offers several advantages. It helps to direct the viewer's attention to the main subject or focal point of the photo, ensuring that it stands out prominently. By reducing the visual noise in the background, a blurred backdrop creates a clean and uncluttered visual aesthetic, allowing the subject to take center stage. Additionally, a blurred background can convey a sense of depth and dimension, adding a professional and polished look to the image. This technique is commonly used in product photography, portraits, and marketing materials to create a visually appealing and focused composition that effectively communicates the intended message. With PhotoRoom, you are able to have a whole photo studio in your pocket without spending all your money on photographers.

If you want to change what appears behind you in your video meeting or call, you can either blur your background, replace it entirely with any image you want, or use Teams virtual background template. And with a Teams Premium license, you can change your Teams meeting background to a branded logo or image specific to your company.

Select Blur to blur your background. You'll appear nice and clear while everything behind you is subtly concealed. 

 


You can also replace your background with one of the images provided, or with one of your own choosing. To use an image of your own, select Add new and then select one to upload from your computer. Make sure it's a .JPG, .PNG, or .BMP file.

Select Blur to blur your background, or choose from the available images to replace it. To upload an image of your own, select Add new and pick a .JPG, .PNG, or .BMP file from your computer.

To turn off background effects, select None .

Select Blur to blur your background. You'll appear nice and clear while everything behind you is subtly concealed.


You can also replace your background with one of the images provided, or with one of your own choosing.


To use an image of your own, select the plus sign and then select one to upload from your device. Make sure it's a .JPG, .PNG, or .BMP file.

@Figma_Support any idea to implement this feature soon? It is actually needed for proper modal display. Instead of just overlay with opacity we may have also blurred background with level of blurring added.

I just purchased Affinity Designer to do all my UI design for my applications. The issue is I'm having a tough time finding anything in the program to create background blurs like Sketch and Adobe XD. I've seen people online saying to purchase Affinity Photo to create a live filter, then move it to Designer, but I find that absolutely insane that I'd need to spend more money & get Affinity Photo just for 1 feature that is widely used in Mobile & Web Design.

So I created a PNG with logo and transparent background. Teams does not wanted to upload or recognize it. So I copied it into the folder manually, then it was selectable, but the transparency did not work! All the transparent area was not blurred, but only white background, with only the logo shown.

(After that teams was all weird, the official Microsoft ones had the same result, bugging to white background instead of blurred. I needed to delete cache %AppData%Roaming\Microsoft\Teams\ to get them working again. Edit: the bug will then be present to every image that uses blurring, if you select only blurring without image this is still working somehow.)

I then tried to rename the custom logo to the filename of the Microsoft ones. Also no luck, it was the same result as above (white background instead of blurred). So I tried to edit the ORIGINAL PNG file, just a little bit and just overwrote it with same resolution, etc. After that, the white background bug was there again.

I've created a simple modal window (with help) and I understand how it functions to make the background dark after clicking the corresponding link. I can't quite seem to figure out how to make the background-image that I currently have become blurry upon clicking, however. I was hoping to do it fully in css.

Im currently trying to take a horizontal video , resize it to vertical , crop each side, primarily sides and top and then add the same video as blurry bars at top and bottom, so the bars stay consistently at the same position and I can zoom in and out in the original video.

I've read several posts online and watched some Youtube videos on achieving blurred backgrounds when taking photos of subjects/objects. Although I can achieve a blurred background effect when I get super close to a small object and focus in on it, I still can't get a good blurred background when shooting parked cars.

Blurring the background is often confused with a shallow depth-of-field. While two sides of the same coin, they are different sides nonetheless. A shallow DoF is just that: a shallow depth-of-field. Which is how much of your subject is in focus. Of course the other side to a shallow DoF is that the more shallow the DoF, the more out-of-focus the background.

The subject to background distance needs to be much greater than the camera to subject distance. Longer focal length lenses with wide aperture lenses are better at this. The car is huge compared to someone's head (portrait), so you are standing back to get the entire car in the frame. Where as with a person you would be much closer to them than they are to the background. Does that make any sense to you?

To get a blurry background you need to need to do one or more of these, and your best bet here would be a longer focal length. As it is already, you aren't even using the longest focal length of your lens, which is 55 mm, and you'll certainly get nothing if you use 16 mm. I'd rather use 200 mm with my camera!

Here a "distant background" is defined as one that is at least ten times the focus distance. For close backgrounds you need a wide f/stop, but the actual formula describing the amount of blur is complex. A common problem is when someone chooses a suitably distant background, but they shoot down onto the subject, and so the actual background is the floor or ground behind the subject and is not very distant at all.

Another caveat is that the subject needs to be actually close, technically, less than half the hyperfocal distance: you can't get a blurry photo of background stars if you are focusing on the moon; if the subject magnification is essentially zero, the background blur will be zero. Hyperfocal distance increases with the square of the focal length, so basically don't try to get a blurry background with a wide angle lens.

Aperture. Sensor size. Focal length. And geometry (camera - subject - background). Area all factors. But you don't have to buy a full-frame camera or a big-budget large-aperture lens to get a blurred background:

... also look at hyperfocal distance shooting strategy and circle of confusion. That will give you some knowledge and idea too. If you shoot for certain output image size, you can front focus a bit, so you get more blur in the background, but your object of interest will still be sharp for viewing.

I ought to mention that the background blur model above is for an ideal lens, and can be considered a first order approximation. There are further, higher-order subtleties, but they become more complex and harder to quantify.

Specifically, lenses that are sharp wide open at the point of focus, and with smooth bokeh, are going to give you a better visual effect than lenses that are soft wide open and deliver a jittery or harsh bokeh. The "law of simultaneous contrasts" is a visual phenomenon where (among other things) the sharpness or blurriness of an object is influenced by the sharpness or blurriness of adjacent objects. A sharp subject is going to look sharper if it is on a blurry background; likewise a blurry background is going to look blurrier if the main subject is in sharp focus. e24fc04721

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