Hi. Recently, Canva has introduced a new way to blend images. I have made a video about it - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Q-KBeugRpDs.html
Hi. If you save the image from Photopea with 300 DPI, the image has 300 DPI. I usually use that image to upload it as design on marketplaces like Redbubble or Etsy, and it still has 300 DPI. However, if you add such image or design into another project, you need to save that project in 300 DPI again or it will have mostly 72 or 96 DPI resolution.
Great video, but it’s extremely important to add a disclaimer to every link you put up! The FDA is cracking down on people not putting that they might receive a small commission from anyone that buy’s through this link. Copy and paste to make it easier, but it’s something that is very important to note with every link.
Huge thanks to you! I had waited it ages for Canva to have this gradient wording!! through your video only then discover it had it on extended app!! Exciting!! By the way, I found that it supported English letter only, do you have any idea we can use Chinese letter in TypeGradient?
Thank you. I had also trouble to create gradient text in Canva. This was a huge issue back then. This tools is great, but it still only works with English letters. Maybe in future it will support other alphabets.
You basically saved my tail! New to sublimation and I already had an order! You helped me print a beautiful picture for the shirt! Thank you sooooo much!
I'm glad this video helped you. Many people don't understand how huge the difference between 72 DPI and 300 DPI can be until they see the design on a real product.
I subscribed from Ontario Canada. You really helped me alot. I kept putting pics as .jpg and were not coming out at 300 dpi so thank you. You saved the day!
if you can figure out an easy way to make page numbers when you have a whole book and dozens of pages.... let me know! it's too much work and I would want an easy trick or them to add it as a function. page numbers. it's like.... a really common thing.
Hi. When I was doing this for my lead magnet, I used a simple trick by downloading the books as PDDF and then open the PDF in Adobe Acrobat once exported. Then I used the editing features in Acrobat to add page numbers. Got to Edit >> Bates Numbering >> Add
Thank you soooooo much. I had a deadline to get a banner made for my son within the next 24 hours. I kept getting a low resolution error message on the Walgreens website. Thanks to you, I was able to fix the issue. I appreciate you so much.
This kinda peeves me. I am paying for a professional creating and editing site for camera ready graphics, and i have to download another app, convert it, then upload it back into Canva to get a camera ready piece to print? Canva should already have this option! So Canva's NEW magic resize doesnt do this? Sounds like Adobe might be the way to go.
Wow thank you for the information! So informative. One thing that Canva allows me to do is make a design with a transparent background. I have already used Cloud Convert to convert my PDF Print file to PNG but now how do I make the background transparent. Can I do that in Cloud Convert too? Thank you!
Hi. Cloud Convert is a good online service, but I do not think that they can convert the image and still maintain the 300 DPI. If you want a free way to convert it, try Photopea, it is a free online alternative to Photoshop - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vHzY_zoVPBY.html
Yeaa... as 'informative' as this video was, I don't think I feel comfortable updating any of my product packaging designs in Canva, converting each design at least TWICE (once to upgrade the resolution to 'print quality from less than 300DPI to 300DPI, then again after downloading the updated design from Canva from non-print quality RGB to CMWK color format), then sending the updated product packaging design to our manufacturer PRAYING with my FINGERS CROSSED that the final packaging printed by our manufacturer which our customers will be receiving their product inside, in many cases being their first purchase of our product, doesn't look like a God awful BLURRY MESS. Literally the opposite of professional product development.
This is one point of view. But for beginners who want to use fulfillment companies for their small print-on-demand business, it should be enough. However, if you want to build a brand, this is, of course, not an option.
Do you customise designs made with AI afterwards using image editing tools to upscale/crop/add writing etc to make them more unique? What formats and sizes of you images eg 1084x1084 or file formats and resolution do you tend to use/need for t-shirts etc? Do you find certain styles more popular like cartoon vs photorealism, for example? Just curious. Thanks
Hi, let me break down what all I do with AI images. For Redbubble, I create simple designs that I then vectorize and resize for 4000 × 6000 px and then convert it to PNG. This is standard process. On Redbubble, the best styles you can upload are cartoon, anime, illustration, just minimalist stuff. I also upload AI images on photo stock websites, so I upscale them by GigaPixel to at least 4000 × 3000 px. Here photo illusions and photo collages works best. For Etsy, where I sell AI vectors, I remove the background from the AI images, and then vectorize them.
i need 7 of these with noise for every colour of the rainbow plus a black and a white one in portrait format for my books, I will definitely try this thanks.
Im not tech knowledgeable I have created many designs for POD, just discovered they are 96DPI will vector ai be able to convert it to high resolution or will I need to alter it to better DPI before changing it to vector. Keep in mind I don’t know/have photoshop. What is the best steps for changing my designs for printing on a large fabric (ie men’s sizes) thank you for you help
Think this way… For larger and more detailed designs, you need a higher DPI. 300 DPI is a standard for printing designs on posters and wall art. For t-shirts, 300 DPI is great, but you can also use 72 DPI without any issue. If you have a rasterized image (PNG or JPEG), a higher DPI generally means better resolution and sharper images. However, it is less flexible when it comes to resizing the image. If you try to enlarge an image created at 300 DPI, it may become pixelated or blurry. On the other hand, a vector image is not made up of a grid of pixels and can be scaled up to any size without losing quality. However, there is an issue with vectors. While vector images can be resized without losing quality, they often can't represent the full range of detail and color gradients that a high-DPI PNG or JPEG image can. So, to answer your question, even 96 DPI should be good for men’s clothing. But if your designs have more details and colors, I would convert them into JPEG format and 300 DPI. The issue is that Canva will save the file only in 72 or 96 DPI. But you can use a free alternative to Photoshop called Photopea to convert the image into 300 DPI. I have a full tutorial about it here - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vHzY_zoVPBY.html If you have any other questions, don't hesitate to ask. I will be glad to share my knowledge with you.