DPI and Resolution for Large Format Prints: A Data-Backed Guide
The question is deceptively simple: "Will this photo print well at 24x36?"
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.
The question is deceptively simple: "Will this photo print well at 24x36?"
Read more →Most people treat photography and wall art as separate pursuits. You snap a photo, maybe edit it, then later wonder why it doesn't quite sing when printed large. The gap between screen and canvas is wider than most photographers realize—but closing it isn't complicated. It requires shooting with ...
Your phone is a legitimate tool for creating print-quality wall art. Not "surprisingly good for a phone." Not "acceptable for small prints." Genuinely gallery-quality photographs.
Somewhere in a photography class, an instructor drew a grid dividing an image into thirds, placed subjects along those lines, and declared it the path to perfect composition. It was true for the textbooks, the homework assignments, and the portfolio reviews. But then something unexpected happened...
Light is the foundation of photography. Not composition. Not subject matter. Light.
A close-up photograph of weathered paint, magnified enough to see every crack. Rust oxidizing in rust-orange layers. The geometric patterns of a marble floor catching afternoon light. These images often don't tell a narrative—they don't have subjects in the traditional sense. Yet when printed at ...
Sarah stood at the edge of a Portuguese clifftop, watching the sunset paint the Atlantic in shades of gold and crimson. Her camera was in her hands, and she was faced with a choice every travel photographer encounters: shoot for the moment, or shoot with intention to transform this scene into wal...
A stunning vista unfolds before you. Mountains pierce clouds. Light spills across valleys. Colors shift from warm to cool as distance increases. You raise your camera and capture the scene.
You edited your photograph for hours. On your monitor, the colors look perfect—vibrant, balanced, emotionally true to the scene. Then the print arrives, and something feels off. The sky isn't quite as blue. The reds look more orange. The overall image appears slightly warmer or duller than you ex...