Email Marketing Basics for Artists Selling Wall Art
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.
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.
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.
Read more →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.
The moment you decide what image to print and what material to use, one more critical choice awaits: finish. That seemingly small decision—matte or gloss—dramatically affects how your print looks, feels, and performs over time.
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.
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...
You have 5,000 followers. Last month, you made two sales.
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?
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...
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 ...
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 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.
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...
Light is the foundation of photography. Not composition. Not subject matter. Light.
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?
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.
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.
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?"
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.