Why your email signature looks blurry and how to fix it in Gmail and Outlook
24 February 2026
0 min read
TL;DR
Blurry email signatures are almost always caused by image scaling, not poor design.
If the image’s pixel width does not match its display width, Gmail or Outlook will resample it and reduce clarity.
Never resize images inside the signature editor. Export them at their final dimensions instead.
Outlook desktop uses the Word rendering engine, which is less forgiving when dimensions don’t match exactly.
Eliminate resizing, and you eliminate blur across Gmail, Outlook, and mobile devices.
A blurry email signature looks unprofessional. Logos appear soft. Text edges lose sharpness. On some screens it may look fine, but in Gmail or Outlook it suddenly becomes pixelated.
So why does this happen? And more importantly, how do you fix it before it creates confusion or damages credibility?
In this guide, you’ll learn:
Why your email signature image becomes blurry
Why email signatures look blurry in Gmail
Why Outlook email signatures lose clarity
The practical steps to fix scaling, DPI, and image size problems
By the end, you’ll understand exactly how image dimensions, DPI, and client behavior affect signature quality, and how to keep your email signature sharp across Gmail, Outlook, and mobile devices.
Why email signatures look blurry
A blurry email signature is almost always caused by image resizing during rendering.
Your logo may be perfectly sharp in the original file. But once it’s inserted into Gmail or Outlook, the email client decides how to display it. If the displayed size does not match the image’s actual pixel dimensions, the client rescales it. That rescaling introduces softness or pixelation.
Here are the four most common causes:
1. The image is being scaled
Every image has fixed pixel dimensions. If a 600-pixel-wide logo is displayed at 300 pixels wide, the email client compresses and resamples it. If a smaller image is stretched larger, it becomes visibly blurry.
Email clients don't preserve sharpness when resizing. They interpolate the image.
This is the most common reason an email signature image looks blurry.
2. Outlook applies fixed DPI rendering
Outlook renders images at 96 DPI. Many design tools export graphics at 72 DPI by default. When the DPI and pixel dimensions don’t align with Outlook’s rendering rules, Outlook may rescale the image internally.
This is why an Outlook email signature can appear blurry even when the image file looks correct before insertion.
3. Gmail resizes images inside the signature editor
When you insert an image into Gmail and drag to resize it, Gmail adjusts the display size without modifying the underlying pixel dimensions properly. The browser then scales the image visually.
That scaling introduces softness, especially for logos and text-heavy graphics.
This is a common cause of a blurry email signature in Gmail.
4. High-resolution displays expose low-resolution images
Modern laptops and mobile devices use high pixel density displays. If an image isn't created at sufficient resolution, the display magnifies the scaling artifacts.
An email signature that looks acceptable on one screen may appear soft on another.
Technical details: Image resolution, DPI, and scaling
Understanding why email signatures become blurry requires looking at how images are rendered.
An image file has two critical properties:
Pixel dimensions, such as 300 × 100 pixels
DPI, which defines how those pixels are interpreted for display or print
In email signatures, pixel dimensions matter more than DPI.
Pixel dimensions are more important than DPI
For screen-based rendering, pixel dimensions matter more than DPI.
If a logo is 300 pixels wide, it must display at 300 pixels wide. If it displays at 280 or 350 pixels, the email client rescales it and reduces clarity.
DPI is primarily a print setting. While Outlook desktop renders at 96 DPI, DPI alone doesn't determine sharpness. Dimension mismatch does.
Why high-density displays expose blur
Modern laptops and phones use high pixel density screens. These displays magnify small rendering errors.
An image that looks acceptable on a standard monitor may appear soft on a high-resolution device because scaling artifacts become more visible.
One practical solution is exporting the image at double the intended width and constraining the display width using HTML attributes. This provides additional pixel data for high-density screens.
The principle behind every fix
Email clients don't enhance images. They resize them. If you eliminate resizing, you eliminate blur.
Email signature blurry in Gmail
If your email signature is blurry in Gmail, the problem is usually caused by browser-based scaling inside the signature editor.
When you insert an image into Gmail, it is embedded in HTML with specific width and height attributes. If you drag to resize the image inside the editor, Gmail changes the display size but keeps the original pixel file. The browser then rescales the image to fit the new dimensions.
That rescaling introduces softness, especially around logos and text.
Why Gmail signatures become blurry
The displayed width does not match the image’s actual pixel width
The image was resized visually instead of exported at the correct dimensions
The image resolution is too low for high-density displays
The logo contains fine text or sharp edges that expose scaling artifacts
How to fix a blurry email signature in Gmail
Follow these steps:
Export the image at the exact size it should appear
If the signature logo should display at 300 pixels wide, export it at 300 pixels wide. Do not rely on resizing after upload.Avoid resizing inside Gmail
Insert the image at its final dimensions. Do not drag the corners to shrink or stretch it.Use PNG format for logos and graphics
PNG preserves sharp edges and transparency better than JPEG.Consider exporting at double resolution for retina displays
If the logo should display at 300 pixels wide, export at 600 pixels wide and constrain the display width to 300 pixels. This improves clarity on high-resolution screens.Send a test email and check multiple devices
View the signature in Gmail, Outlook, and on mobile to confirm clarity.
When the file’s pixel dimensions match the displayed dimensions, Gmail doesn't need to rescale the image. That prevents blur.
Outlook email signature blurry
If your email signature looks blurry in Outlook, the issue is usually caused by DPI scaling and image compression.
Outlook renders images at 96 DPI. Many image editing tools export graphics at 72 DPI by default. When the image is inserted into Outlook, the application recalculates how it should display the image based on its own DPI standard.
This recalculation often results in subtle scaling, which softens edges and reduces clarity.
Outlook may also compress images during send, particularly if the image is large or resized after insertion.
Why Outlook email signatures become blurry
The image DPI doesn't match Outlook’s 96 DPI rendering
The image is resized after being inserted into the signature editor
Outlook compresses the image automatically
The image was designed too small and stretched larger
Even small changes in scaling can make logos and fine text appear soft in Outlook.
How to fix a blurry email signature in Outlook
Export images at 96 DPI
This aligns with Outlook’s rendering standard.Match the pixel dimensions to the final display size
If the logo should appear at 300 pixels wide, export it at 300 pixels wide.Avoid resizing inside Outlook
Insert the image at its correct size. Do not drag to scale.Disable automatic image compression in Outlook settings
In Outlook for Windows, go to File > Options > Advanced and uncheck image compression if available.Test by sending to another Outlook mailbox
Confirm that the signature appears sharp after delivery.
How to fix a blurry email signature fast
If your email signature image is blurry, you can usually fix it in a few minutes. The key is to stop resizing images inside the email client and prepare them correctly before insertion.

1. Match the image’s pixel width to its display width
If the file is 300 pixels wide, it must display at 300 pixels wide. Any mismatch forces the email client to resample the image.
2. Never resize inside the signature editor
Do not drag to scale images in Gmail or Outlook. Insert them at their final dimensions.
3. Use an image that is large enough for its intended size
Do not stretch small images larger than their original pixel dimensions.
4. Test before deploying
Always send test emails to Gmail, Outlook desktop, Outlook web, and mobile to confirm clarity.
If scaling is eliminated, blur is eliminated.
Keep your email signatures sharp across every device
Blur in email signatures is rarely a branding issue. It's almost always a scaling issue.
When images are exported at the correct dimensions and not resized inside the email client, they render sharply. The challenge is maintaining that standard across every user, device, and email platform.
In many organizations, signature images are added manually. Users resize logos. Old files get reused. Dimensions drift. Over time, clarity and consistency break down.
That’s where Exclaimer steps in. Our email signature management platform automates image handling, formatting, and cross-client rendering—so you never have to troubleshoot blurry signatures again. Whether you’re onboarding users or rolling out new email banners, Exclaimer keeps everything sharp and scalable.
The result is sharper signatures, consistent branding, and fewer recurring formatting issues. Try it yourself today.










