Troubleshooting blurry poster previews?

rebeccaheartsny
Contributor

Hey all-
I’ve been back and forth with support on this with no real resolution (and am honestly not sure if it’s a “create” issue or a "technical" one) but I’m hoping some of you might be able to weigh in.

I have an entire series of 8.5 x 11 original illustration prints that I’d love to upload and sell. I've worked really hard on these and want to add them to my shop. Unfortunately, I’m hesitant to do so because the previews are so blurry that they paint my work in a bad light:

Screenshot 2023-06-10 at 10.01.38.png

I am a designer by profession and accustomed to working with various image types, so it’s not a file size issue. In fact, I was asked by support to send over the original files, and they confirmed that they are clear.

The resolution is 300 ppi, as per Zazzle's suggested specs. I have tried uploading as .jpg, .png, .pdf. I have tried uploading higher-res versions. I’ve tried uploading different files. They’re always blurry.

These files are 100% crystal clear on my computer. I can print on my home printer at 8.5 x 11 without issue. I also work with a print shop to print and sell these locally, and the file size is not an issue for them; their prints are always perfect.

I have designed these as 8.5 x 11 and am adding the image to this size only, so there is no reason why they shouldn't be clear — they’re specifically designed to print at 8.5 x 11, without needing to scale up/down at all. When publishing I am not receiving a warning regarding resolution, despite the fact that the poster is extremely blurry.

When I contacted support, I was told:

“Because you can get posters in large sizes you need to adjust the product image on the website to be more accurate to a poster.”

When I asked what was meant by “adjust the product image,” (I’m already choosing “this size only”) the reply was:

“If you enlarge the size of the product that your design appears on, that the image will appear more clearly. So if you select a larger poster size, the image may be sharper.”

This doesn’t make sense, because the print is designed for 8.5 x 11 — a large poster would make the image blurrier rather than sharper, as it would be stretched to fill a space larger than it is intended to fit.

Right now I can't imagine anyone wanting to purchase these, which is incredibly frustrating because the one print I did upload is my most-viewed product EVER (8K+ views!) but has only sold once. I can only assume this is due to the preview — heck, I wouldn’t buy it, either!

Support's suggestion of stretching the image onto a larger poster is definitely not the answer, but is there anything I can do to make sure the previews are clear?

3 REPLIES 3

Sara_H
Honored Contributor III

@rebeccaheartsny  I can only think of uploading your own cover photos to showcase them (have options for uploading 10 now) so you could zoom in a section cropped and at angle to showcase your illustrations?

I don't do posters so haven't come across this issue but I reckon as you have this size only selected, the preview that zazzle offers is at a set size and resolution and it will appear blurry so their suggestion is changing the size of the product merchandising option (which you don't want to do)

You can check where your views have come from through view insights on the product page. I find that most of mine come from google with people looking for clip art so perhaps that's why yours has been viewed so much

 

Ah, the cover photo idea is an interesting one! I haven't really played around with the cover photos yet but I might try that. If I upload the maximum number of photos, will those replace all of Zazzle's blurry preview images?

I checked my insights and for this product, 97% of views are coming from "Zazzle Marketing & SEO." I have no idea why they'd market something that looks this bad.

Jadendreamer13
Valued Contributor III

I created a 16 x 20” poster at 150 dpi, and the thumbnail resolution is nice and sharp. I created the artwork on an 8.5 x 11” Illustrator art board to keep the file size easy to manage. Next, I pasted it as a Smart Object in Adobe Design to Print and scaled the artwork to fit the design space, and chose Object Level Upload (individual layers upload all at once). Then the file with all the layers opens automatically in the Zazzle design tool, where I add text and templates.

The Adobe Design to Print App is no longer supported, but it works with earlier versions of Adobe Photoshop.

If you use Adobe Creative Suite, you can download previous versions on your computer.

I don’t know if this will fix your problem, but Adobe Design to Print is a fabulous tool that’s worth checking out.