In the digital age, resolution is king. Whether you are a professional photographer printing a billboard, a real estate agent trying to salvage a drone shot, or a historian restoring an old family portrait, the math is brutal: you cannot create detail where none exists. Or so we thought.
The software utilizes specialized models trained on millions of images to handle different types of visual data:
Print requires 300 DPI. If you have a historical image or a cell phone photo that needs to go into a magazine layout, Gigapixel AI is the only tool that makes it viable. For billboards (which are viewed from distance), you can take a 12MP file and blow it up to 300MP. Topaz Gigapixel AI
The only remaining copy was a low-resolution JPEG intended for web use. The Solution:
One of the most difficult subjects to upscale is the human face. Our brains are hardwired to recognize faces; even the slightest distortion looks unnatural (a phenomenon known as the Uncanny Valley). Gigapixel AI includes a specialized "Face Recovery" model. When it detects a face in a photo, it applies a different algorithm specifically designed to reconstruct facial features—eyes, skin texture, and hair—resulting in remarkably lifelike corrections. In the digital age, resolution is king
is not a nice-to-have filter; it is a utility, like a hammer or a drill. It solves a specific, painful problem that no other consumer software solves as elegantly.
A client found a 1990s employee ID photo. The scan was 300x400 pixels. They wanted an 8x10 print for a retirement party. The software utilizes specialized models trained on millions
for personal restoration projects that traditional tools can't handle The Challenge:
Gigapixel AI is available for Windows and macOS, with the following system requirements: