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 →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?
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 ...
Walk into any contemporary art gallery, modern office, or trendy home and you'll see them: acrylic prints. They've become the default choice for anyone wanting bold, vibrant wall art that makes an impact.
Your camera captured something beautiful. The image looks stunning on your monitor. Then it arrives from the print lab, and something feels off—the colors aren't quite right, the details look soft, or the contrast seems flat. This happens to photographers of every skill level because on-screen ed...
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.
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...
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.
A gallery wall is more than just multiple pieces hung in proximity. It's a curated collection arranged with intention, balance, and artistic purpose. When executed well, it transforms a bare wall into a personal statement—a visual narrative that tells the story of what you love.
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...
If you've browsed wall art options, you've probably encountered the same question: "What's the difference, and which should I choose?"
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.
Most artists post randomly.
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 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.
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.
The question is deceptively simple: "Will this photo print well at 24x36?"
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.
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.