With BeFunky's Blur tool, you have the ability to decide which parts of your photos you want to remain sharp and in focus, and which will fade into the background. Use it to control the depth of field and direct your audience's attention to what matters most in your image. Blur images and transcend the limits of perspective with unmatched ease!

Create a dreamlike effect using our professional quality blur image tool. With a few quick and easy clicks of the mouse, you can use it to blur images, soften your photos and create a mysterious and alluring atmosphere in your photography. Just adjust the blur intensity and combine it with our photo to art effects to create an endless variety of unique pictures that will add character to your portfolio.


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With the Isolate Subject feature, all it takes is a single click to blur the background of a photo while keeping your subject crisp and clear. The Blur tool automatically removes hard lines, clouds detail, and blurs photos which makes your subject really pop. Aside from the classic Blur, the Motion Blur mimics movement in an otherwise still photograph, and the Radial Blur creates a vortex surrounding your subject. Whatever blur you choose, you can then add text to your photos along with graphics and design elements to the foreground of your blur to instantly create beautiful, professional-quality images for all your business and personal needs.

The Blur tool isn't just for editing photos. By arranging graphics on your canvas and applying a blur, you can create a creative background for text, product photography, or your device wallpaper. You can also try our Pixel Blur and Funky Focus tools, found under the Blur & Smooth category, for even more creative freedom. Adjust the Blur Amount and Gamma Correction to make your artwork more abstract, or keep it subtle. It's up to you!

Make the subject of your photo stand out by opening a photo in Edit mode and selecting the new Background Blur option. The Photos app automatically finds the background in the photo, and with a single click, instantly highlights your subject and blurs out the background. You can also customize the effect by adjusting the Blur Intensity or use the Brush Tool to modify the areas being blurred.

I have some photos which were taken with a DSLR camera but pathetically since there was a goof up with the settings of the camera they have come out blur about 60-70% blur is there any way in Affinity Photo I can make it more clearer and sharper ?

Further to what @GarryPhas said, there is a tutorial here which has some good advice you can try but it really does depend on the amount of blur you are trying to 'fix'. However, if you can provide an example image, you may get some better replies

What a Coincidence, even before you posted this link here, I already just did all the steps in this Video and Just duplicated the steps in this Video however it is not giving the Final Output as I would have liked still a lot of blurriness on the Photo and when I zoom in even a little bit, it shows Blocks of Pixels very easily.

Generally I have to say that to sharpen blurred photos doesn't lead to satisying results verry often. It often causes noisy images. And a loss of details. You need at least a filter that sharpens edges more than the inner areas of image objects. The basic one is "Unsharp masking". A verry good one.

So I'm not verry optimistic that it will be worth investing much work into it. Normally, if you have a photo that c0ntains artefacts, you would blur it to get rid of them. But your photo already is blurred and lacking in details.

That said, there are techniques to get the best an image can provide, but they are complex, and take a lot of time, like hours. For example, when an image has a lot of noise, isolate the color channel(s) where the noise is. Then work on that channel removing it, using different blur filters, like Bilateral, Median, or Gaussian. Some noise is color, while most others are Luminance.

There's Frequency Separation, used a lot by portrait photographers. I haven't tried this on your example yet. Also detecting edges, and then sharpening only the edges in the image. What I see in your image that poses the greatest problem, is the contrast in the skin area. The person has dark, perhaps black hair, and a lot of hair on their arms. There's some darkness to the right side of the person's face, is this facial hair?

Were you hired by this person to shoot portraits? If so and you had these unfortunate results, it may be easier to swallow a tough pill, and see if you can re-shoot it. I shot a graduation, most all the images sucked, blurry, out of focus. The autofocus malfunctioned. Had to get a replacement camera. But there was no reshooting. Lost money, on that one, because I wouldn't take any payment.

How Do I blur the edges of an image freely without using Square or circle crop?

say I want to blur one corner instead of all, or different parts of the image.

I was only able to find tutorials using Square and circle crop,

Any feedback helps! Thank you,

Most people think that blurry images are bad. But when used the right way, a blur effect can turn a casual image or photo into something that looks completely professional. Blurring an image is also an important process for preserving the safety or identity of individuals or objects that shouldn't be clearly seen in an image.

Kapwing's modern, online tools let you blur images in just three clicks. The slider allows for precise control, and this online blur tool supports a variety of image formats, including JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, and much more. Get started with adding blur to your images without any downloads or complicated tutorials.

To begin you will need to choose a photograph, the best option is one that has people or an object as the main photo but has a distracting background that you would like to blur out, one that has a depth of field is ideal. For this technique you will use these functions in PowerPoint, Copy and Paste or the Duplicate Command, Background Removal and Artistic Effects.

@Drummy: Do you mean that the option to remove the blur effect isn't available, or it is there, but you're unable to complete the edit? If it's the latter, are you making sure to hit 'Apply' in the top right corner after you've adjusted the slider?

We've all seen those glamorous action shots - the snowboarder finishing his jump off a ramp, the cars flying by on a race track, etc. In this Instructable, I'll be giving you some tips and tricks on how to create some interesting photographs of moving objects yourself!

Even better, you don't need a fancy DSLR to take these types of photos. A simple point-and-shoot will work just as well, but if you want more control over your images for better tweaking, go right ahead!

I used a Canon Powershot A4000 to take these photos. Depending on your particular camera, you may have more or less options that you can pick from - in my case, the Program Mode of my camera let me choose only my ISO sensitivity.

What's that, you ask? The ISO setting of cameras dictates how sensitive your camera's sensor is to light. The higher it is, the more sensitive it is, and your camera will "see" more light particles. This is ideal for night-time photography, when there isn't much light to begin with. However, with higher ISO settings, there comes a catch: your photos become more grainy.

Two other important settings for photography are shutter speed and aperture. Your shutter speed is how long your camera's aperture stays open to capture an image. For action shots, ideally you want something very small, in the range of 1/500 of a second or less. (However, this Instructable teaches you to tweak that just a bit!)

To take these types of photos where just your object of interest is in focus, but the background is blurred, some tweaking must be done. A fast shutter speed will cause everything in your photo to be in focus. Therefore, a slower shutter speed is desired. Unfortunately, the Program Mode of this particular camera doesn't let the user choose their own shutter speed or aperture, so I was forced to adjust my ISO. One more useful note about ISO is that a smaller ISO will slow your shutter speed (the shutter is open longer), while a high ISO will increase your shutter speed (the shutter closes faster). I picked ISO 100 to take these photos. The camera auto-selects the rest.

But wait! Won't a slow shutter speed cause everything to be blurry then, since the object is moving? Technically yes, but with a particular trick, you can make it so that only your object is in focus.

Hold your camera steady and find the object that you want to capture. While you're holding your camera, depress your shutter release button halfway to focus on the moving object. Move your camera along at the same speed that the object is moving, and try to keep your object in the same frame as you pan your camera along with the object. It's important to keep your camera level, and avoid abrupt motions. Fully press your shutter button whenever you're ready! The object in reference with your camera will appear to be still, but the background will be moving at a different speed from the camera. Hence, you get a blurred background. ff782bc1db

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