Choosing Images That Convert: What Buyers Actually Want
Every artist has a portfolio of 30-50 images. Some consistently convert to sales. Others sit there collecting views but never converting.
Read more →From choosing the right product to prepping your photos and styling your space, we've got you covered every step of the way.
Every artist has a portfolio of 30-50 images. Some consistently convert to sales. Others sit there collecting views but never converting.
Read more →Getting your artwork in front of buyers starts with a crisp, color-accurate photograph. The difference between a fuzzy phone snapshot and a professional image can literally mean the difference between a sale and a passed-by listing. If you're uploading art to the JustPix marketplace, the quality ...
The JustPix tier system isn't just a badge—it's a real economics engine that directly impacts your earnings and creative freedom. Moving from Debut to Gold tier represents more than just sales numbers. It's a progression that compounds: you unlock higher earnings multipliers, more upload slots, a...
You have a portfolio of physical paintings—oils, acrylics, watercolors, mixed media. You want to sell them as prints on JustPix. But there's a critical gap between your studio and the marketplace: your painting has to become a digital file that accurately represents what's on canvas.
Most artists understand they earn more when they make more sales. But on JustPix, there's a second lever that works in parallel—the tier multiplier system. And if you're not thinking strategically about it, you're leaving money on the table.
This is the guide you wish existed when you first joined JustPix.
Here's what happens when an image is cropped wrong for marketplace printing: buyers place orders that can't be fulfilled. Prints come out with important elements cut off or distorted. Images get flagged for rejection. Your portfolio takes a credibility hit.
You have two primary paths to get your artwork into the JustPix marketplace: photograph it or scan it. Both methods work. Neither is universally "better." The right choice depends on your artwork's size, media, texture, and what equipment you have access to.
You've uploaded a stunning piece to the JustPix marketplace. The colors are perfect. The resolution is pristine. The composition is compelling. And then... it doesn't sell.
Your thumbnail is the first impression—often the only impression. A customer scrolls past dozens of artwork tiles. Yours has less than one second to stop them.
Your JustPix marketplace is invisible without traffic. The artists making real money aren't just uploading beautiful work—they're funneling audiences from multiple platforms directly to their JustPix storefront.
Nothing frustrates customers more than uploading a perfectly composed photo to see their main subject vanish around the canvas edge. The problem isn't their image—it's not understanding how different wrapping styles handle edge content.
You've photographed your artwork beautifully, uploaded it to JustPix, and a buyer's first print arrives. They open the box, unfold the canvas or acrylic, and... something's wrong. The colors look different. The shadows are too dark. The reds are more orange than red. The entire mood of the piece ...