Monday, January 26, 2026

Post 603: Selling Your Art Part 3 - Sell the Artist

Selling Your Art Part 3 - Sell the Artist

How to sell your art online or in person is what nearly all artists ask about at some point. This blog post is part 3 of the 3 part series on Selling Your Art. 

See Selling Your Art Part 1 and Part 2 

Nitty Gritty on How to Sell Your Art 

NO ONE is searching for you or your art, your website, your art show.

YOU must be the one to get your art "out there" so that it can be seen and potentially purchased. No one else is. 

UNDERSTAND your niche and style of art to build your understanding toward who your potential clients are in order to get your art in front of them and to TALK about your art.

How to Sell Your Art: 4 Things Art Buyer Really Want... 

Now let's take a look at the actual how YOU can sell YOURSELF.

There are art spaces where your art must speak for itself - sort of. The art gallery or exhibit you have your art in is run by staff and you are not physically there except perhaps on the day of the art reception. In this regard, you will or should be actively promoting your art on display on social media, local event avenues, friends, family, art followers, etc.

Ask other artist where they were successful, what platforms they used, what art shows are good to attend, what typically sells at those shows and galleries. 

Then there are art shows, popup art shows, group art shows where you are on stage. Your vendor booth is when you are the person tapped to make the sale. Have a gander at this video:

 
Sales Tips for Live Art Shows by ArtsyShark Carolyn Edlund
This is an excellent watch for ALL PWAS Members! 

Notice all the tips...
1. Greeting
2. Be prepared to engage
3. Listen to them
4. Ask questions
5. Place item in their hands (a little tougher with a painting, any ideas with this one?)
6. Include everyone in their party
7. Eye contact!
8. Child with party? Bubblewrap diversion
 
I would add to stand up when people come to your booth space. AND Stay off your phone. Create a script for yourself so you can reference it, memorize it. Many of us are not outgoing, so we need the help in speaking with people so we can make the sale. These tips work well with individual artist shows as well as art group shows.

"I certainly have not the talent which some people possess, of conversing easily  with those I have never seen before. I cannot catch their tone of conversation, or appear interested in their concerns, as I often see done." - Mr Darcy. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin

Important to Remember:  people do not always buy artwork because its the greatest artwork in existence. They may buy artwork because of the artist. The buyer and artist have built a relationship, a connection. 

 
 Budget-Friendly Art Market Tips & DIY Display Hacks for Art Panel Walls
From Cassie's Colorful Life
 Some great tips all around - after all, the reason you are doing to show it to sell, right?

 
10 Rules to Selling Your Art at Art Fairs and Events by Dave Makes Things

Art Ideas Toward Making Income

Although the artist's ultimate goal may be the creation and selling of the own original artworks, there are other ways for the artist to earn income to support their art career. The sale of original artwork is a one-by-one process but these other ideas may offer ways to generate income as well. Do remember, some of these ideas will require a LOT of traffic, followers, and extensive marketing, as always - do the research and find what will work for you and your skills.

  • Teaching art classes and workshops.
  • Create and sell online courses.
  • Craft fairs, art markets, farmers markets, art festivals, art or gallery walks, art crawls - wherever you can connect with a variety of people, collect emails, get feedback, test products, and more.
  • Streaming / livestreaming your art process. 
  • Sell digital downloads and templates.
  • Art commissions for pet portraits, family portraits, murals, and more. 
  • Networking with someone writing a book that might need an illustrator, or write and sell your own art books, art guides, or e-books. Think book covers, cook books, children's books...
  • Offer limited edition prints and/or look into print-on-demand products.
  • Art merchandise customized with the artist's designs - mugs, tote bags, t-shirts, puzzles, and more.
  • Have extra space? Rent out studio space to other artists. 
  • Offer graphic design services. Create a logo for someone, business cards, or flyers for a fee.
  • Offer private art lessons. 
  • Be a live caricature artist, a face painter, a paint and sip artist. 
  • Apply for artist residencies. 
  • Licensing your artwork for commercial use - get royalties. 
  • Sell NFTs or digital art tokens. 
  • Build a membership site with a subscription fee presenting exclusive content. 
  • Monetize your social media, newsletters, blog with sponsored content, affiliate links, ad revenue, and more.
  • Crowdfunding 
  • Apply for art grants for an art project. 
  • Feature "art sales" shows with square foot shows which are 12x12 artworks, each artwork priced the same and market the show extensively. 
  • Go to your local gift shops and boutiques, that may sell local art.
  • Try selling at gallery gift stores, museums.
  • Watercolor greeting cards
  • Offering your artistic services such as:
    • An art show or contest Juror or Judge.
    • Art talks, event speaker or panelist. 
    • A photographer - not only the weddings but think about offering your art group members professional photos of their artworks for a reasonable fee. Set up photo sessions on a scheduled basis for specific sizes, certain number of pieces - whatever works for you. Once you have the equipment set up, its a great way to move through the process before moving to the next size of artwork.

See more: 

10 Practical Networking Tips for Artists to Boost Career

16 Creative Ways to Make Money as an Artist (That Actually Pay the Bills)

Follow-up When Potential Buyers Show Interest

Another part of selling is following up when someone shows interest at a show, through email, through a DM.
 
How do you followup when someone sends an inquiry about your artwork? Do you have a process to followup with them?
 
Let's say someone emails or DMs you on how much your artwork is. Don't get nervous, don't panic, don't justify your prices. Don't say too much. No excuses like 'because of this or that'. If you panic, your potential buyer may go silent. You'll be listening to crickets.
 
Instead: Have a followup process where you will be calm-cool-clear-collected.
 
Step 1: You will confirm to the buyer that you received their inquiry. Confirm what they are asking about - which piece, which service, which size.
Step 2: Very calmly and very clearly give them the data they requested. 
Step 3: Now, you will add just one "trust detail". Say something like, "This piece is available now, and can be shipped within 2 weeks."
Step 4: And we can make the next step extra easy for them by saying, "Would you prefer local pickup or shipping?" 
Step 5: Finalize by closing the loop with, "I can send an invoice and hold it for 24 hours.
 
Something like this gives you and the buyer a framework that is clear.
 
This video below, is a very straight forward look at art selling. 
 
10 Tested & Proven Ways to Sell Your Art as an Artist (Complete Guide & Honest Overview) by Contemporary Art Issue (CAI)

ART TIPS

  • Dress to impress is as important as always even when its terribly hot. Look professional!
  • Your attitude is so important. A happy artist with energy will help to sell. 
  • I do suggest going down the rabbit hole for a period of time when researching how to sell art and your art business. There are so many great videos and art tip suggestions that you can learn so much from, and a ton of tips on this blog too! 

The Art of Selling Art, Selling You, Selling Higher Priced Art

Alternatively, there are schools of thought that say in order to sell your art and to sell it at a higher price for the professional and established artists is to: 

  • Find your target audience by posting you with your artwork with high quality photos and videos TALKING ABOUT your art - NOT trying to SELL it. Speak directly to your ideal Buyer.
    • Develop the script for each artwork saying WHO it may appeal to and why.
    • Do NOT send potential Buyers to a website link. 
    • Always answer your DMs when someone asks about the price. 
    • Post at least 3 to 5 times per week on your social media. Be genuine.
  • Build a communication line to the potential Buyers and a developing a relationship with them directly when they ask how much it is or what else you have. Be engaging. Ask what they love about your artwork. 
  • Build perceived value by:
    • NOT offering the art merchandise that many artists do.
    • Don't offer any marked down pricing.
    • Have at least several high priced artworks that are extra large, running $5000+ and pose them in a very clean, very professional environment with YOU in the pictures as well. Build trust.
    • If a person says that those artworks at that level are unaffordable for them, show them the 'more affordable' pieces that you have, say 16x20 and 18x24 medium to large range that are under the 5K. Perceived value.
    • Close the sale - learn the scripts and tactics to make the sale. 

Let's face it. If your followers and people commenting on your social media posts are all other artists, you are not selling to them. They are trying to sell their own artwork. Finding your Buyers and moving toward making them repeat Buyers is the beginning of your marketing plan. As with anything, its up to you to learn the process of selling in order to sell well.

For Further Reading

Selling your artwork is very hard, and yes - I heard that "Duh!" Each of us will need to find what works best for each of us, our families and obligations and the period of life we are in. Nonetheless, knowing what we are getting into before we spend too much money or become discouraged means to not only create the best possible artwork we can, but doing the homework to learn how to make the jump into the art world as wisely as we can.

14 Best Places to Sell Art to Make Money - Etsy, Redbubble, local, Saatchi Art, Zazzle, Artfinder, Soiety6, eBay, Shopify, gift shops, coffee shops, farmers' markets, social media

14 Best Websites to Sell Art Online | Commissions, Marketing, and More - marketplaces, print on demand platforms, ecommerce stores

Top 10 Tips On How To Sell Your Art - Your story, website, show sold art, new venues, cohesive brand, SEO, social media, local shows, prints, positivity.

The Art of Selling Art: 10 Ways to Sell Your Art: A Beginner's 2025 Guide -  Optimize Portfolio, Social Media, NFT & Digital, Print on Demand, Collaborate, AR, Participate, Email, Commissions, Voice & Visual Search
 

18 Platforms for Artists to Sell Their Creative Work Online in 2025 

Art that Sells - Understanding What Makes Art Marketable - researching trends, target audience, more

Did you like this post? Learn something new? What tips do you have to share on selling your art? Drop a comment below and Follow this blog.

Selling Your Art - In Person Part 1

Selling Your Art - Online Part 2

Selling Your Art - Selling the Artist Part 3


Author: Donna Liguria is the Blogmaster for the PWAS Artistry Spin Blog and Donna's Cave Paintings Blog, and an artist member of the Prince William Art Society (PWAS) in Woodbridge, Virginia. And she takes on the PWAS social media duties as well (help me!) Donna specializes in acrylic painting of landscapes, seascapes, historic locations, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com and her Donna's Esty site to shop her art. 

Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm (typically, but check the website in case of any changes).

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment (below)! ...Remember, comments are monitored so they will not show up immediately.

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Thursday, January 22, 2026

Post 602: Snow is Cancelling the PWAS Meeting Set for Monday, Jan 26

Snow is Cancelling the PWAS Meeting Set for Monday, Jan 26

The Prince William Art Society meets once a month on the fourth Monday of the Month but NOT this month! The upcoming snow storm is threatening inches and inches of snow so the artists are staying home and trying to dig out.

PWAS Art Meetings

Typically the art group meetings are held at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Road, but the Board has elected to cancel the meeting. The next meeting will be held on Monday, February 23, 2026 7:30pm and we look forward to seeing you then.
Tall Oaks Community Building in the Spring 

Paint While Being Snowed In

Need some ideas to paint? We should do a snow challenge...10x10, or any size? What do you think?



Author: Donna Liguria is the Blogmaster for the PWAS Artistry Spin Blog and Donna's Cave Paintings Blog, and an artist member of the Prince William Art Society (PWAS) in Woodbridge, Virginia. And she takes on the PWAS social media duties as well (help me!) Donna specializes in acrylic painting of landscapes, seascapes, historic locations, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com and her Donna's Esty site to shop her art. 

Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm (typically, but check the website in case of any changes).

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment (below)! ...Remember, comments are monitored so they will not show up immediately.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Post 601: Upcoming PWAS Member Art Shows for Feb 2026

Upcoming PWAS Member Art Shows for Feb 2026

The PWAS Artistry Spin Blog is happy to post the PWAS Members art shows and events, individual or group shows every month. Each PWAS Member is welcome to send me info of any art event they are showing in, if you let me know some details... hey, it is FREE promo for your show! Let's see who has a show coming soon for you to check out! Some great art by some great artists!

PWAS Member Zee Berrios

The next show in the Prince William area that will show some of my pieces will be in the Manassas Central Library at 8601 Mathis Avenue, Manassas from Feb 3rd till March 3rd. It will showcase pieces from various series. Other confirmed upcoming shows:

Aug, 2026 - (solo show) The Dance Series, Fredericksburg Center for the Creative Arts,  813 Sophia Street, Fredericksburg, VA 22401


Nov - Dec, 2026 - (solo show) The original Natives Series, Manassas City Library, 10104 Dumfries Road, Manassas, VA  20110

PWAS Member Kwaku Ofori Yirenkyl

My solo exhibit at the Montclair  Public library from Jan 21 to March 19th, 2026. 


PWAS Member Otis Stanley

PWAS member Otis Stanley is exhibiting in a Veterans Art show in conjunction with the Arlington Artists Alliance.

PWAS Members - You need to send me YOUR art show list at the end of each month to be posted FOR the next month. Dec for Jan 2026, Jan for Feb...etc. I can't promote you if I don't know what you are up to! 


Author: Donna Liguria is the Blogmaster for the PWAS Artistry Spin Blog and Donna's Cave Paintings Blog, and an artist member of the Prince William Art Society (PWAS) in Woodbridge, Virginia. And she takes on the PWAS social media duties as well (help me!) Donna specializes in acrylic painting of landscapes, seascapes, historic locations, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com and her Donna's Esty site to shop her art. 

Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm (typically, but check the website in case of any changes).

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment (below)! ...Remember, comments are monitored so they will not show up immediately.

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Monday, January 19, 2026

Post 600: Selling Your Art Part 2 - Online

Selling Your Art Part 2 - Online

How to sell your art online or in person is what nearly all artists ask about at some point. This is the second in a three part series on the multiple ways for artists to find art opportunities for getting their art seen and sold.

Art Show photo by Ken Meardon (a past Prince William Art Society member) 

See Part 1 of Selling Your Art here and Part 3 is next Monday.

Selling Art Online 

Here is where doing the research seriously comes into play. There are plenty of people that have success with various art selling platforms and there are probably even more artists that do not. Any of these platforms can get quite expensive if you launch into something head first and don't know what you are getting into.

With the increasing turn to selling art online, the internet has become a very busy place. There are tons of fine artists, craft artists, painters, photographers, sculptors, and digital artists in every nook and cranny at every career stage and every style and genre.You'll need to clearly articulate where and what you do to find your best fit.

Hard work? Yes. There are some ways to make life easier like scheduling posts, so research art tips, tricks, hacks, money saving ideas and suggestions to make what you can easier but as always, being consistent is key. 

A Professional Website

Do you need a website? It is generally considered that a professional artist should have one. This is your personal store front, your main source where people go to learn more about you. Keep it clean, keep it simple, clearly show your artwork.

About quality images for your website:

  • Show your art straight on (NO background, trim the image)
  • Show from different angles
  • Take close up shots of the art showing details
  • Have shots of YOU with the art
  • Show the are in a different room or two so that the viewer can imagine it in their own environment. 

It is important to remember that on the internet Content is King. Content Matters. Keywords and Key phrases are how you find information online AND how people find information about YOU. An image without TEXT is a dead end. Thus, you must provide text as well as images.

On Social Media 

Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, X / Twitter, TikTok, and perhaps YouTube

Artists might use Facebook Marketplace to sell art or via their own website. Some artists use social media as a feedback platform and places to post upcoming events. Involve your viewers in what you do so that people get to know you and always provide links to your main storefront, for whichever platform you may use.

Create a consistent plan that you can stick to and manage when posting content. Create a schedule and post with purpose. 

See Getting Your Art Out There: Social Media, the Internet, Your Art and Your Art Group 

Online Shopping Platforms 

There are many of them with a variety of services, pricing, ease of use - you name it. Ask around what other artists are using, their opinions, and success rates. As always, updating and working your information is a daily, if not several times weekly, hands-on art task toward selling your art. Here are some choices:

Amazon, Etsy, Shopify, Fine Art America, Saatchi Art, eBay, ArtPal, Artfinder, Society6, Redbubble, Artsy, Singulart, DeviantArt, Artplode, ArtStation, 1stDibs, ArtSpace, Kooness, Artistics, Artsper, UGallery, Pictoclub, Rise Art, Zatista, Artmajeur, OpenSea, SuperRare, Mintable ... to name a few.

New ones come in and some fade away. As always, do the Research, research, re.... 

Have a Newsletter 

Create and send out a periodic newsletter. Collect emails and schedule your time frame (at least quarterly, if not monthly). Your fans can opt-in to receive your content and opt-out if they change their mind. The potential is toward building a loyal and supportive community fan base that want to learn more about you.

Be genuine, start simply, offer exclusive content.

About Blogging

Talk about what you are doing, how you are doing it, what you have new, what you are working on. Write about your inspirations, your studio, your tools, your upcoming projects and shows. The blog is a subset, a link on your website. Share your blog with your social media to help promote content. See Tech Series 4: The Blogging Story

Being Online

Consistency is a MUST, you will need to do something everyday to promote your art online, some how, in some way, even if in only a small way.

Look into QR Codes perhaps vs. Business Cards. Personally, I like have a card with a QR Code AND using QR Codes as well. See Artist Documents - What Do I Need?

Remember that online on social media, the algorithms change. This means that although you may find your art sales may be going well at some point, when the website platform makes a change, you may see a shift in your sales one way or the other which might then trigger adjustments. Nature of this terrible beast.

 
How to Actually Sell Your Art Online : FREE Strategy for Artists - Studio Wildlife
I highly recommend this video 

Obviously, becoming an artist and trying to sell your artwork can be looked at as a daunting, if not expensive path to take. Start off small (if need be) and look for so called "free" or less expensive art opportunities, have a budget, and build your career. Talk to more experienced artists, follow blogs like this and always be learning.

For Further Reading (Listening)

Tech Series 1: Instagram for Artists 

Tech Series 2: Are You Reeling on Instagram? 

Tech Series 3 How to Be Pinteresting

Tech Series 4 The Blogging Story 

Tech Series 5 Who Art Thou?

How to Build a Professional Facebook Page as an Artist (2026 Update)

 
Mastering Facebook for Artists - From Zero to Sold Out
From Market Your Art (Podcast)

Did you like this post? Learn something new? What tips do you have to share on selling your art? Drop a comment below. 

Follow this blog and watch for Part 3 of Selling Your Art on Monday, January 26, 2026.

Selling Your Art - In Person Part 1

Selling Your Art - Online Part 2

Selling Your Art - Selling the Artist Part 3


Author: Donna Liguria is the Blogmaster for the PWAS Artistry Spin Blog and Donna's Cave Paintings Blog, and an artist member of the Prince William Art Society (PWAS) in Woodbridge, Virginia. And she takes on the PWAS social media duties as well (help me!) Donna specializes in acrylic painting of landscapes, seascapes, historic locations, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com and her Donna's Esty site to shop her art. 

Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm (typically, but check the website in case of any changes).

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment (below)! ...Remember, comments are monitored so they will not show up immediately.

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Friday, January 16, 2026

Post 599: About the Blank Canvas

About the Blank Canvas

What came first? The blank canvas or the image of what would be on that canvas? What is your painting surface of choice? Want to learn more about canvases? This blog post has a look at this art vehicle in your artistic journey, studying the types, sizes, canvas prep, framing, shipping, storage, and buying canvases.

Assorted Canvases - photo by Donna Liguria

Types of Canvas

Canvases are made of various materials, come in an assortment of sizes, and may be created for specific purposes and medium uses. 

Beginner Canvas

Save your "cheaper" canvases for art practice when developing as a beginner, art classes, or to learn a new style. These would be any "value packs", .75 width canvases, side or back-stapled canvases. Potentially, you could use the canvas panels as well.

Professional Canvas 

Professional artists - fine art creators will use the best quality of canvases either cotton or linen that they can buy. Typical canvases used are in a gallery-wrapped presentation and are often ready-made and pre-primed.

DIY Canvas: I've heard from artists in my art group that when they were in college taking their art courses and the horrors of having to learn how to stretch and make their own canvases from scratch. Sure, anyone can make their own and perhaps depending on the size needed for some projects, they might need to. You do you of course. 

See How to Stretch Canvas Painting: Easy Step-by-Step Guide 

 
A Guide to Stretching Canvas / Jackson's Art

Stretched Canvas - ready-to-use, ready-to-go, already primed (usually) canvas stretched over a frame.

Studio Wrapped Canvas - a stretched canvas of usually less than an inch where the staples may be visible and will often require framing. 

Splined Canvas - the canvas is attached to the frame, not with staples, but with a spline (like used in screen doors).

Gallery Wrapped - this is a method of stretching canvas on the wooden frame so that it wraps over and around the sides, tucking and hiding the staples that attach the canvas to the frame. Often, there is not any need to frame a 1.5 depth gallery wrapped canvas because of the crisp and clean presentation. The artist can also paint the sides so that the view of the artwork is seamless from different angles. 

Cotton Canvas - this is the most common type of canvas in use today and is the more affordable choice. Cotton comes in a variety of weights and weaves and good for most painting techniques.

    Plain Canvas - standard type for general purpose.

    Duck Canvas - tightly woven fabric, durable, suitable for heavy-duty use. 

Linen Canvas - made from the fibers of the flax plant, canvases made of linen tend to be very durable and are definitely more expensive. Linen canvas is also less prone to stretching and sagging than cotton. See Linen Canvas 101: Everything You Need to Know Before Buying    

Synthetic Canvas - made from nylon and polyester for use with waterproof applications.

Other Canvases - include hemp (coarser texture), jute (low durability), and ramie (used in blends).

Canvas Panels - a piece of canvas glued to a rigid board like Masonite, cardboard, or wood (a backing board), generally is pre-primed, is light-weight and easy to store. The canvas panel is excellent for traveling, plein air painting, and classrooms, but will require framing when showing.

Canvas Rolls - when you desire to create your own stretched canvas, rolled canvas is an option. These will need to be stretched and primed.

Watercolor Canvas - a more recent addition to the world of canvases, is similar to cold-pressed paper but more durable and can be stretched onto a frame like a more traditional canvas. The cotton canvas has been coated in a special formula allowing the surface to be more absorbent and able to accept water-based paints. The watercolor canvas also affords the opportunity to hang the artwork without framing or being under glass.

See What Is It Like to Use Watercolor Canvas? 

Art Prints on Canvas - allows artists to have their artwork presented as ready to hang much like regular paintings. Flat giclee art prints require alternative packaging or framing that the art print on canvas may not. The print on canvas also is not of the original work. 

Read more about canvas types here: 

13 Types of Art Canvas: Choose the Perfect Canvas for your Artwork  

Expert Guide to Materials, Properties, Uses, and Selection

Canvas Size

Canvases come in any size and shape, but there are the common sizes to consider, because there are common-sized frames that are ready-made and less expensive than a custom frame. While most galleries and art shows want the studio canvases framed, the gallery wrapped 1.5 depth canvas will typically need to be painted to include the sides and are typically not required to be framed.

Standard and common canvas sizes are in inches. 

ART TIP 1: I've started to be more specific in my artwork descriptions to include the depth with the size as well. For example 16x20x1.5 or 16x20x.75. I've had clients ask how deep the canvas is because they were building a gallery wall in a hallway and didn't want the deeper canvas to profile that far outward.

Mini Canvas - great for gifts, small home accessories, ornaments

  • 2x2 
  • 3x3
  • 3x4
  • 3x5 

Small Canvas - terrific for portraits, small landscapes, gift paintings, practice studies, plein air

  • 4x4
  • 5x7
  • 6x6
  • 8x10
  • 10x10
  • 9x12 

Medium Canvas - popular for still life, portraits, art competitions, landscapes

  • 12x12
  • 12x16
  • 16x16 
  • 16x20
  • 18x24

Large Canvas - great for bold statements, dramatic compositions, detailed landscapes, excellent for abstracts

  • 20x24
  • 24x30
  • 24x36 
  • 30x40 

Extra Large Canvas - for even bolder statements, dramatic compositions, detailed landscapes, excellent for abstracts

  • 30x30
  • 36x36
  • 40x40

There is a point where a large canvas is not fitting in your car, you know. I remember being in the parking lot at a local Home Goods and watching a couple of women trying to figure out how to fit an art print on canvas they had just purchased into their vehicle. I knew it wasn't going to fit, that sucker was BIG...and they finally realized it and took it back into the store to figure out their next steps. 

ART TIP 2: There are plenty of artists that only paint huge works and that's fine. There are also artists that paint mainly smaller works and that's fine too. A person's studio (or car!) may dictate the top canvas size a person could potentially store or move but also consider that some art spaces and shows ask for minimum or maximum size allowances for their needs as well. These requirements could potentially limit an artist's preferred canvas size. Generally, I consider having multiple price points (canvas or print sizes) for potential buyers as the better path.

See Canvas Sizes: Ultimate Guide for Standard, Custom & Specialized Dimensions 

Canvas Prep for Painting

Canvas, in its raw form will need to be prepared in at least a few ways, and layers before paint for the actual artwork can be applied.

Sizing Layers (Size)

Sizing is the first layer and is a clear coating applied to the raw canvas, which seals the fibers providing a barrier.  Types of sizing include: Rabbit Skin Glue (RSG), Acrylic Medium (Gloss or Matte), Gelatin, and Acrylic Sealers. The sizing will prevent the canvas fibers from absorbing too much paint.

Priming Layers (Primer, Gesso)

Acrylic Gesso is a primer that gives the canvas a smooth and durable surface compatible with acrylic and oil paints. Types of Gesso include Titanium White Gesso, Clear Gesso, Black Gesso, and Tinted Gesso. There are also solvent-based oil painting primer for use specifically with oil painting. It is advised to sand with fine-grit sandpaper between layers.

Some acrylic gesso can function similarly to sizing, but the gesso isn't a direct substitute for the traditional sizing methods.

Under-painting Layer (Ground)

The under-painting is a groundwork or base layer allowing the artist to establish structure, value, and contrast. A thinned-down layer of acrylic paint (a wash) establishes shadows, highlights, and tonal values.

See Size, Primer, Gesso and Ground Explained

Painting Layers

The actual painting of the artwork is very often processed in layers. Layers are achieved in various coats of paint applied one over the other to achieve depth, texture, and richness and meaning to the artwork.

Sealing Layers 

Sealing Layer is an essential step in the painting process enhancing the longevity and resistance to any environmental damage. This protection is from dust, moisture, fading over time, and surface unification. Types of sealers include Acrylic Sealant or Varnish (brush or spray applications), typically available in matte, satin, or glossy. Varnishing can also enhance the colors of the painting as well.

Topcoat Layer

UV-resistant acrylic varnish is an additional barrier against sunlight and lighting damage.

Read more about canvas preparation:

How to Prep the Canvas for Acrylic Paint: A Guide

How Do You Prepare a Canvas for Painting: A Simple Guide 

To Gesso or Not to Gesso, That is the Question - this Artistry Spin blog post includes multiple Prince William Art Society members opinions and processes about gesso.

Canvas - To Frame or Not to Frame That is the Question

Depending on where you want your art career to go and the choices in canvas surfaces, there are times when framing is a must. Framing adds to the costs in pricing, the weight in shipping, and potentially the Buyer's choice when deciding to purchase.

If you plan on selling artworks on canvas, entering art shows and selling in galleries, framing artwork has specific rules that must be adhered to. On the Prince William Art Society's Display requirements page, it is required to have canvas panels, side stapled and back stapled .75 width artworks to be framed. Always read any art show or gallery's call for art requirements to know what their expectations are.

Gallery Wrapped Stretched Canvases are usually exempt from mandatory framing in Calls for Art, although painting the sides is required. 

A good question to ask is do artworks sell more with a frame or without, with a basic and simple frame or something more elaborate? What do you think?

See Zee Berrios' recommendation in Selling Art 1 and To Frame or Not to Frame: A Guide for Artists Selling Their Work

Shipping a Canvas

The world is your oyster because you can sell artwork and ship it to anyone, anywhere in the world. Great. Now, how do you do that? What will it cost? Do you need to insure it? Even more so, how do you send that canvas as safely as possible?

Some of the answers about shipping I cannot answer here. In my Etsy Account, I opted to only offer shipping at the national level at this time, so it is fairly straight forward to configure the shipping costs for size of painting, its weight, and location.

The artist will need to have the right supplies so that he or she can 1. Safely; 2. Professionally; 3. Efficiently - send the artwork to the Buyer:

  • Glassine Paper (and/or) Plastic Palette Wrap - acid-free materials!
  • Bubble Wrap - do NOT let this wrap come in contact directly with the artwork!
  • Corner Protectors 
  • Cardboard Sheets or Foam Board
  • Packing Tape/Gun
  • Cardboard Box - never use a previously used box for your fine art! 
  • Kraft Paper or Packing Peanuts* - be careful if using the peanuts!
  • Sharpie Marker, Scissors, Knife/Box Cutter 
  • Self Healing Cutting Mat
  • T-Square 
  • Box Sizer Cutting Tool
  • Fragile Stickers, Do Not Bend Stickers 
  • If rolling the canvas, Cardboard Tubes
  • Gloves 
  • Weight Shipping Postal Scale 
  • Shipping Label Printer 

Your in home Shipping Station or chosen shipping method will determine the exact items you will need. Do a deep-dive into the research of shipping by exploring these articles:

FedEx - How to Ship Artwork

The UPS Store - Ship Artwork 

How Much to Ship a Canvas Painting: Essential Tips for Cost-Effective Shipping 

ART TIP 3: Always wrap the painting with the bubbles on the bubble wrap facing OUT! The bubbles can imprint on the artwork.

How to Mail a Canvas Painting Safely: Your Complete Guide 

How to Ship Paintings / A Step-by-Step Guide for Artists and Galleries

ART TIP 4: Look up some YouTube videos as well on artists shipping their artworks to watch their process AND to get some great ideas on other artist's processes. I've seen some awesome, beautifully packed artwork that include the artwork's Certificate of Authenticity, a customized hand-written thank you note and business card. Some artists used beautiful ribbons and ties. Other ideas are a discount code for a future purchase and an art care document. The key here is to make it pretty, like the Buyer is receiving a gift.

ART TIP 5:  Before purchasing multiple sized shipping boxes and envelopes, decide the sizes of canvas and /or prints you are willing and able to ship. Purchasing your chosen size selections in bulk is less expensive but you will need to store that inventory in your Shipping Station. You certainly do not need a container for each size of canvas or print, so configure your options. Of course, a box sizer cutting tool will help too.

Where to Buy Canvases

Locally - check your local Hobby Lobby, Michaels, well, even Walmart has canvases (but I'd use those as more a beginner or practice canvas). See if you have an actual brand name art supply store near you like Plaza Art, Blick Art, Utrecht Art, or an arts and crafts store. Do look at your local art stores for sales events before heading out and it might be good to stock up whenever they have a great sale.

ART TIP 6: Do check local thrift stores. I recently watched a video where the creator went to various stores like Burlington, Walmart, etc and purchased inexpensive, already framed artworks with smooth surfaces on canvas and took them home, primed them and then he painted his own artwork on top. The frame would need to be taped off to protect it of course, but what an interesting way to begin.

Check your local Facebook Marketplace for well priced options too.  

Online - most big brand name artist supply stores have a website and offer shipping. The selections will be -awesome-. Again, look for art sales on your favorite brands.

Of course, there's always Amazon! And Michaels offers delivery and bulk buying options.

U.S Art Supply 

Blick Art

Jerry's Artarama 

Utrecht Art Supplies 

Jackson's Art Supplies

Artist & Craftsman Supply 

Mister Art

MichaelsPro

I've read that Cheap Joe's Art Stuff in Asheville, NC closed, but a local company may have purchased it and plans on continuing the store.

Photo by Ashe Walker on Unsplash

Storing Canvases

We all must remember that canvases are very fragile things, and after the artist paints it, for the artist at least, a very valuable commodity. Getting paintings to and from art shows, shipping, and simply storing your unsold art inventory will need to be addressed as those canvases potentially start filling up your art studio.

See  Storing Your Artwork 

Alrighty then,  my fellow artists, what tips or suggestions would you add about the world of canvases? What is your favorite brand? Have you used linen canvas? Drop a comment below and let us know!

BONUS: see Canvas Sizes of Famous Paintings - Learn from the Masters 


Author: Donna Liguria is the Blogmaster for the PWAS Artistry Spin Blog and Donna's Cave Paintings Blog, and an artist member of the Prince William Art Society (PWAS) in Woodbridge, Virginia. And she takes on the PWAS social media duties as well (help me!) Donna specializes in acrylic painting of landscapes, seascapes, historic locations, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com and her Donna's Esty site to shop her art. 

Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm (typically, but check the website in case of any changes).

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment (below)! ...Remember, comments are monitored so they will not show up immediately.

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