Creating Content That Drives Art Sales: A Repeatable Framework
Most artists post randomly.
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.
Most artists post randomly.
Read more →If you've browsed wall art options, you've probably encountered the same question: "What's the difference, and which should I choose?"
Every artist has experienced the sting of a vanity metric milestone that meant nothing. Ten thousand followers, but the same three people commenting. A viral post that brought thousands of eyes but zero sales. These are the hollow victories that remind us of a fundamental truth: not all followers...
Standing in a furniture store, you can hold up a picture frame to estimate how it will look on your wall. But ordering wall art online? That's trickier. A 16x20 canvas sounds reasonable until it arrives and looks comically small above your sofa. An 40x60 print seemed perfect until you realize it ...
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.
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 ...
Small rooms demand different thinking than expansive living spaces. A 24x36 canvas that transforms a living room becomes overwhelming in a cozy bedroom. A 16x20 print that works above a guest bed might leave a master bedroom feeling empty.
There's one question we hear more often than any other at JustPix: "How big should my canvas be for the wall above my couch?"
Every artist has a portfolio of 30-50 images. Some consistently convert to sales. Others sit there collecting views but never converting.
You've selected the perfect canvas print, ordered it from JustPix, and carefully installed it on your wall. But something feels off. Is it the size? The color? No—it's too high. Or too low. Or positioned at an angle that makes your guests tilt their heads to view it properly.
Most creators upload art the way they eat lunch—when hunger hits, you grab something. It's functional. Not strategic.
You post your art. People see it. Some people click to view more. But then what?
You've likely encountered the same choice in many industries: overseas production at lower prices versus domestic production with higher costs but better oversight. When it comes to wall art, this choice carries real consequences for the final product you display in your home or business.
A restaurant needs signage announcing its daily specials. A boutique wants art that reflects its brand. A real estate office needs staging that impresses clients. A corporate office seeks artwork that sets the right tone for meetings.
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 ...
Different platforms serve different purposes. Instagram is a storefront. TikTok is a discovery engine. Pinterest is a visual search tool. Facebook is a community space.
You have 50,000 Instagram followers. Your work gets thousands of likes. You've built something people love. And yet, you're still figuring out how to turn those eyeballs into actual dollars.
You've ordered your beautiful custom canvas from JustPix. It's arrived, and you're ready to hang it. But standing in front of your wall with mounting hardware in hand, you realize: There are so many options. Which one actually works best?
The 90-day rolling window isn't just how JustPix calculates your tier. It's the heartbeat of your earnings. Every 90 days, your sales are recalculated. Your tier is recalculated. Your multiplier is recalculated.