How to Sell Prints on Shopify: The 2026 Setup Guide
Setting up a Shopify store to sell art prints in 2026 takes a weekend if you know what you're doing. This is the start-to-launch guide that skips the marketing-heavy fluff and tells you what to actually click.
Pick the right Shopify plan
Shopify has four plans. For art print sellers, the answer is almost always Basic at $39 per month.
- Basic ($39/mo). Enough for everything an art print seller needs to launch. Two staff accounts, unlimited products, all the core sales channels. Transaction fees: 2% on third-party processors, 0% on Shopify Payments.
- Shopify ($105/mo). Lower transaction fees on third-party processors. Worth it once you're doing $5,000+ per month in revenue and processing through Stripe or PayPal. Skip until then.
- Advanced ($399/mo). For shops with custom-rate shipping and multiple locations. Not relevant for a one-person print shop.
- Plus ($2,300+/mo). For seven-figure businesses with complex needs. Not relevant.
Start on Basic. Upgrade later when the math shifts.
Choose a theme that doesn't fight your art
The best Shopify themes for print sellers are the ones that get out of the way. Your customer is here to look at your art. The theme should be a clean frame around the artwork, not a decorated venue competing with it.
Three free themes that work well for art print shops:
- Dawn. Shopify's default. Minimal, fast, accessible. Good if you want a clean editorial feel and you're going to do most of your styling through theme settings.
- Sense. Slightly warmer than Dawn. Good for sellers whose work skews toward pastels, watercolor, or soft photography.
- Refresh. Modern, bolder typography, larger product imagery. Good for sellers who want their hero photography to dominate.
Paid themes (Impact, Studio, Symmetry) are fine but rarely necessary at launch. Start free, upgrade if you outgrow it.
Pick a theme, customize three things — logo, fonts, hero image — and stop. Most theme work is procrastination dressed as productivity.
Build the product catalog
Print file specs
Whichever fulfillment partner you eventually choose will accept some range of file specs. To stay flexible, prepare every print as:
- Resolution: 300 dpi at the largest size you'll offer (so a 24×36 print needs a 7,200×10,800-pixel file).
- Color space: sRGB. Most POD partners want sRGB, not Adobe RGB or ProPhoto. Convert before exporting.
- File format: TIFF for archival quality, JPEG at quality 12 for smaller files. Most POD partners accept both.
- Bit depth: 8-bit. Some partners accept 16-bit but the file size doubles for negligible visible difference on print.
Pricing strategy
Two pricing patterns work for new shops:
- Cost-plus. Take the wholesale print cost from your fulfillment partner, multiply by 2.5x to 3x for retail. Simple, defensible.
- Premium-anchored. Pick a price point ($45 for an 11×14, $85 for a 16×20, $135 for a 24×36) based on what comparable sellers charge. Don't undercut — premium pricing signals premium product.
Premium-anchored beats cost-plus for most fine-art-style shops. Customers buying art prints aren't comparing your unit cost — they're comparing your work against other artists at similar tiers.
Product photography
The single highest-leverage thing on a print product page is the hero photo. Customers can't tell the difference between $30 art and $300 art from a flat scan. They can tell from a contextual photo.
Two photos minimum per listing:
- The flat scan. The print itself, edge to edge, color-accurate.
- An in-context shot. The print framed and hung in a real room, ideally a real human in frame for scale.
If your fulfillment partner generates auto-mockups, the in-context shot can come from there. If not, set up a test wall in your home office and shoot at golden hour with the lights off — natural light is free and looks right.
Title and description
Don't over-write print descriptions. Three things matter:
- Title: the artwork's title plus a quick descriptor of medium ("Coastal Fog #3 — Black-and-White Photography Print"). Customers searching internal Shopify search will hit you on either.
- Short description: two sentences. What it is, what makes it different.
- Specs block: sizes available, paper type, edition info, frame option toggle.
Long marketing copy hurts more than it helps. The art does the selling.
Choose a fulfillment strategy
Three options, in increasing order of "actually scales":
Self-fulfill
You print at home (Epson SureColor or similar), pack, ship. Total control over color and quality. Ceiling: about 50 orders per month before it eats your weekends. Best for: artists who want to maintain hands-on production.
Local print shop with manual handoff
You take the order on Shopify, then send the file to a local print lab who prints, you pack and ship (or they ship). Less labor than self-fulfill, more control than POD. Best for: photographers who care deeply about ICC profile matching and have a print lab they trust.
Print on demand
An app on Shopify connects to a partner's production. Order routes automatically, partner prints and ships direct to your customer, you never touch the order. Highest scale, lowest unit margin, partner-quality dependency. Best for: most new sellers and anyone whose primary product is digital art or photography that doesn't need calibration to match.
For most new shops, POD is the right answer. Pick a partner whose paper, color, and customer support you trust. We compared the major options here.
Plan for framed variants from day one
Most art print sellers start with unframed prints. Within six months, customers ask for framed versions. The decision tree at that point is:
- Stock and ship frames yourself. Buy frames in bulk, fit each print, pack and ship. Doesn't scale past a few SKUs.
- Local frame shop with manual handoff. High touch, high cost, doesn't scale.
- Print-on-demand framing. A specialized framing partner adds framed variants to your store. Same model as your POD print partner — you never touch the framed order.
Plan for option three from the start. It's not just lazy — framed variants run at higher unit margins than unframed and customers spending $80 on a print will spend $250 on the framed version. Full guide to adding framed variants here.
Marketing your shop
Don't try to do every channel. Pick two and run them well.
- Pinterest. The print seller's secret weapon. Pinterest is a search engine for visual product discovery; people pin and shop from there months after the original post. Set up a Pinterest business account, pin every product image with a clear title and link back to your Shopify store, and leave it running.
- Instagram. Slower compounding than Pinterest but better for community. Post the work, post the process, respond to comments. Don't worry about hashtags strategically — just post good work consistently.
- Email list. The most valuable asset you'll own as an art shop. Add a Shopify newsletter signup form to your homepage and footer. Send a monthly email featuring new work or behind-the-scenes content. Email converts repeat customers at 5-10x the rate of social.
- SEO. Slow but compounds. Write a few blog posts targeting search intent ("how to choose art for a living room," "why prints fade and how to prevent it") and link to relevant products. Build over time.
Common pitfalls to avoid
Underpricing prints
Anchor your prices at premium. Customers shopping cheap prints already have Society6 and Redbubble. Your shop is for customers paying for your specific work.
Choosing the wrong paper finish
Matte vs glossy vs satin matters more than new sellers expect. Test prints on each before you commit. The wrong finish makes good art look cheap.
Ignoring international shipping
Half your customers may be outside the US. Set up Shopify's international shipping rules at launch — a customer who can't see a shipping price won't check out.
Neglecting damage policy
Read your fulfillment partner's damage replacement policy before you launch. Find out the response time. Test by claiming a (real) damage. The first claim is not the time to learn the process.
Get started
The full setup, in one weekend:
- Day 1 morning: Sign up for Shopify Basic. Pick Dawn theme. Add logo and fonts.
- Day 1 afternoon: Set up payment processor (Shopify Payments), tax settings, shipping zones.
- Day 2 morning: Pick a POD partner, install the app, configure your first 10 prints.
- Day 2 afternoon: Launch. Place a test order against your own address. Tweak based on what arrives.
Add framed variants when you're ready
FramesOnDemand is the framing-specialist POD app for Shopify. 40+ frame styles, 45 mat colors, custom sizing, made in New Jersey. Free to install — pay only for what we ship.
Install on Shopify