What Size Canvas Over a Couch? The Complete Visual Sizing Guide
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?"
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.
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?"
Read more →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.
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.
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 ...
The decision between canvas and acrylic prints can feel surprisingly personal. After all, you're not just choosing a material—you're choosing how a cherished memory or favorite image will live on your wall for years to come. Both canvas and acrylic deliver stunning results, but each brings distin...
If you've browsed wall art options, you've probably encountered the same question: "What's the difference, and which should I choose?"
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?
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 ...
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?
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.
When your artwork is destined for a canvas that dominates a living room wall or a metal print that commands attention in an office lobby, cutting corners on file preparation isn't just risky—it's a missed opportunity. Large format printing (24×36 inches and above) requires precision that separate...
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.
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...
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.
The question is deceptively simple: "Will this photo print well at 24x36?"
When you commission a piece of art for your home or business, you're making an investment. You want it to look stunning for years—maybe even decades. But here's the uncomfortable truth: not all prints are created equal, and environmental factors can dramatically affect how long your wall art main...
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 upload a photograph, select a material and size, place an order. A few days later, a beautifully crafted print arrives at your door. But what happens in between? What transforms a digital file into a physical object you'll live with for decades?
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.