Mastering Natural Light for Print-Ready Photos
Light is the foundation of photography. Not composition. Not subject matter. Light.
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.
Light is the foundation of photography. Not composition. Not subject matter. Light.
Read more →You've chosen your image. You love it. You know it's going to look incredible on your wall. But then comes the moment of truth: How big should it actually be?
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.
Social media is a casino. You upload, the algorithm decides if anyone sees it, and you have no control over reach. One platform change and your audience vanishes.
The moment you hang a print on your wall, a process begins. Invisible rays of light—UV radiation, ambient light, heat—constantly bombard your image, attempting to break down the chemical bonds that hold pigments together.
The question is deceptively simple: "Will this photo print well at 24x36?"
A buyer lands on your JustPix profile and sees a single stunning painting. They like it. They're interested. But they're on the fence—is it worth the money for one piece?
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 ...
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...
Most creators upload art the way they eat lunch—when hunger hits, you grab something. It's functional. Not strategic.
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.
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 ...
Every artist has a portfolio of 30-50 images. Some consistently convert to sales. Others sit there collecting views but never converting.
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...
Your artwork gets rejected for resolution. Now what?
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.
If you've browsed wall art options, you've probably encountered the same question: "What's the difference, and which should I choose?"
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.
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.