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I see on the 10 lb tissue paper Zazzle box says it is discontinued. but when I click on the 10x14, 14x20, 18x24, 21x29, it does not say discontinued. So, what do we do? Do I have to redo all my tissue paper and choose the sizes not discontinued? Is the tissue paper still a product we can sell I hope, so I really liked the tissue paper.
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Is the words "Merry Christmas" or "Happy Halloween" copyrighted?
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Hi everyone, As we move through seasonal sales cycles like Halloween, Thanksgiving, Winter Solstice, and Christmas, it’s easy to focus on individual product tags but don’t overlook your storefront tags. These quiet champions play a big role in Zazzle’s internal search visibility and external SEO. Recently, I realized my store tags hadn’t been updated since 2009 (😳), and when I refreshed them with trend-driven, seasonal keywords like “Christmas in July,” I saw a clear increase in traffic and sales. Within five days, I sold a table lamp and 21 sheets of tissue paper. Coincidence? Maybe. But when your storefront speaks the language of the season, customers (and algorithms) tend to listen. So what does updating store tags really do for you? Features of a Seasonal Tag Refresh: Highlights your current niche, such as “Halloween decor,” “Yule gifts,” or “Christmas in July tissue paper” Helps Zazzle correctly categorize your shop for algorithm placement Aligns your brand with current search behavior and seasonal buyer intent Benefits You Might See: Increased impressions during trend-driven searches More engagement with in-season products Sharper brand identity that evolves with the calendar Better alignment between About Page, homepage visibility, and customer expectations How to Update Store Tags Effectively: Use 5–8 specific keywords that reflect current offerings Rotate quarterly or monthly depending on your niche Explore trending phrases in Zazzle’s search bar or Google Trends Keep the language customer-friendly and seasonally relevant (e.g. “Spooky Halloween Invitations” vs. “October cards”) If your store’s still rocking tags from a bygone decade (guilty as charged), consider giving it a seasonal refresh your future views and sales might just thank you. Footnote: The strategies shared here came out of some weekend house cleaning. While updating my About section, I scrolled down and realized my store tags hadn’t been touched in years and they no longer reflected what was happening in my shop. I updated them using SEO phrases based on how customers actually search when shopping online. For anyone curious, Zazzle offers its own tagging recommendations in the Maker Manual: Make Your Tags Count and their broader Title, Description & Tagging Best Practices guide.
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Another month passed by and I wasn't paid the referrals. Contacted the Zazle support with no reply. Did I miss something? Shouldn't it be automatically added to your regular payment? Does someone have the same problem?
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Has the payment for this month of July 2025 gone in? thank you Will
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I have sworn off posting in the forum but not saying anything about this issue is bothering me. So those, who feel the need to attack this post and me, have at it. 1. Many people don't seem to realize this. https://community.zazzle.com/t5/general-zazzle-discussion/about-the-forum-since-it-is-public/m-p/10176 2. So besides potentially finding threads in searches on the internet, customers can read posts on the forum without signing in. I didn't seriously think about this until a post made a few days ago. On many of my jobs, there was an admonition not to talk about my employer, the businesses they do business with, and customers in public. So customers can come into the forum, and read discussions that the customer had with a creator. It is bad enough that a conversation that they probably took as private is found on the forum and could be found in an internet search but it is worse if negative comments are made. Now, a couple of days ago, a screenshot of an order was posted. This has been done previously. Zazzle only includes the first name of customers for privacy reasons. The post was a discussion of potential negative intentions by the buyer(s). It was suggested that the people listed were recipients of an item sent by one buyer. I decided to test this theory so I searched the first names, city, and states of the listed "recipients" together in one search. I found businesses in those cities related to the product sold run by a person with the first name listed. So I searched the names and locations with the business type and saw the name of a website that I seen listed in two previous searches. So I did one more search with the name, location, and the website. I found that each of the persons was part of a couple registered on the website. So the website may have bought the product and sent it to the couple for some reason. So private information that was in a private sales record is now part of a searchable public forum. 3. Now, a thread has been started discussing a business associate of Zazzle. Granted the majority of the posts in this thread are favorable to the business associate. However, businesses do search the internet to find any mention of their business. https://www.google.com/search?q=companies+search+internet+to+find+mention&oq=companies+search+internet+to+find+mention+&aqs=chrome..69i57.39500j0j7&client=tablet-android-alco&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8 Imagine when this business associate of Zazzle finds negative comments about their business in this public searchable Zazzle forum. Now, I have done what I feel is the right thing by saying something, so I can forget about it.
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Just wanted to share a few thoughts that might help bring clarity, kindness, and perspective back into the conversation. There’s something we sometimes forget in the creative rush. When we post in the Zazzle forums, we’re not just speaking to other designers we’re speaking to the internet. These discussions aren’t private. They’re publicly visible, and many are indexed by search engines like Google and Bing. That means your comment, your store link, even your phrasing can appear in search results and be read by potential customers, bloggers, or anyone curious enough to click. So, what does that mean for how we show up? It means kindness isn’t just polite it’s professional. It means tone matters just as much as content. And it means every word we write becomes part of our brand’s footprint. Whether you’re offering a tip about seasonal store tags, sharing a strategy for product visibility, or including a relevant link to your storefront, the ripple effect is real. We don’t always know who’s watching. A fellow designer might thank you, a future customer might click your avatar, and a buyer who found your Christmas in July collection in a search might read your post and feel a connection. That’s why it’s worth staying respectful, structured, and sharp. Just take a breath before you hit “reply.” Read your words like a stranger would. Because in the age of visibility, professionalism is more than manners it’s momentum. And if you’d like Zazzle’s official word on etiquette, their Community Guidelines are always worth revisiting. This Creator Forum overview also reminds us that these threads are meant to support and elevate the whole creator space. So, as we build, share, and connect, let’s do it with care. Our voices carry. Let’s make sure they resonate. And maybe just remember what so many of us were taught growing up: “If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all.” Simple, timeless, and still the best kind of marketing advice. Thanks for stopping by; hope you have a creative and blessed day. Susan Golis
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With the introduction of Zazzle’s marketing fees in April, many of us began reevaluating what our creative work is truly worth. I tried to offset those costs by raising my royalty rate hoping it would balance the equation without disrupting sales. Instead, my sales plummeted. I assumed shoppers were passing over my now higher-priced products in favor of similar designs at lower price points. Longtime gift shop buyers who used to stock my cards and tissue paper disappeared. Then in June I lowered the royalty on my most popular items, and soon after, the orders returned. Did I discover my “sweet spot”? Not quite. What I found was my long-lost repeat customers and while selling to them again brings joy, earning significantly less for the work I’ve poured my heart into remains discouraging. So now I’m curious: Have you adjusted your royalty rate to accommodate the marketing fees? Did it affect your visibility or sales? How do you strike that balance between pricing with integrity and staying competitive? Let’s talk about what’s working, what’s not.
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Hi everyone, With Zazzle’s latest tissue paper mockups now live, I wanted to open up a friendly conversation about what really works when it comes to showcasing these products and what doesn’t. As sellers, many of us rely on visual storytelling to connect with customers, and tissue paper deserves a presentation that enhances its beauty and potential. Just to share a bit of context before shifting into digital design, I spent 10 years as an Area Visual Merchandiser for the Fang Brothers Group (parent company of Episode), based in Hong Kong. I oversaw retail stores throughout Florida and Atlanta, where visual presentation strategies were essential in connecting customers to products. Much of what I recommend for mockup styling today is drawn from that experience in large-scale fashion retail especially when it comes to showcasing texture, clarity, and emotional appeal. From my perspective, the new Zazzle mockups unfortunately fall a bit short. Rather than elevating the designs, they often flatten clarity and dull the resolution especially when framed. For intricate seasonal patterns or woodland-inspired motifs, a frame mockup doesn’t convey the richness or purpose of the product. Plus, when the most compelling part of the design is minimized or cropped, it’s unlikely to inspire a purchase. A few mockup alternatives to consider: First, try showing the tissue paper as a lightly folded sheet with a small gift (like a tie set) placed in the center. Add a gift bag off to the side with the same tissue paper peeking out from the top. This visual pairing tells a powerful story how a wrapped gift and matching bag come together as a complete presentation. It subtly encourages customers to buy both at once. Second, for craft and decoupage audiences, lay the tissue paper perfectly flat on a white background to preserve clarity and color accuracy. Around it, include crafting elements like scissors, Mod Podge, and a brush to evoke the creative process. Off to the side, show a completed craft such as an ornament, plate, or decorated jar featuring the same tissue paper. This creates a strong visual link between inspiration and execution. In my experience, Zazzle's frame mockups rarely do justice to tissue designs. They compress detail, dull vibrancy, and rarely connect to how the product is actually used. At best, they can highlight a small swatch but they’re not ideal for selling a seasonal or decorative product intended for wrapping or crafting. Thinking ahead, before creating your mockup, take a moment to consider what you want to achieve. Are you promoting a singular product like tissue paper on its own or are you trying to show the customer’s need for a coordinated set, such as tissue paper paired with a matching gift bag? That decision shapes everything: the layout, the props, the emotional tone. A bundled visual often encourages duplicate purchases, while a focused shot may highlight design detail. Both have value it just depends on your goal. If you're ready to create your own visuals, here are some free platforms that make it easy: Pixelied’s Free Mockup Generator (https://pixelied.com/mockups), Canva Mockup Generator (https://www.canva.com/create/mockup-generator/), Freepik Mockup Generator (https://www.freepik.com/mockup-generator), FlexClip Mockup Tool (https://www.flexclip.com/tools/mockup-generator/), and DesignHub’s curated list of mockup tools (https://designhub.co/best-mockup-websites/). I’d love to share my visual vision with all of you, if you're open to it. After all, helping each other is one of the surest ways we open doors to success
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If you've sold backpacks is it with names or without names? I'm curious cuz I know some mom's are careful about not putting their kids names on backpacks because of strangers. Just curious if anyone knows what sells more
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Zazzle, you've had a lasting effect in my life, ever since I came across you in 2013. You've made a huge impact in my life, all positive. Zazzle has been such a great platform for all the designers, all these years - its technology, its customer centric approach, the excellent Zazzle support team, the backend Zazzle Creator Team - one can't ask for a better set of professionals - people - fellow Zazzle designers who've always lent a helping hand when it was needed the most. Pushing the boundaries of the designers with the constant introduction of new products, the challenging market scenarios - everything has pushed one to do better. I will never be able to thank you enough Zazzle for everything. You've no clue how important a role you've played in my life. And I thank everyone in the Zazzle Team for these years and I wish you Zazzle a hundred anniversaries more. Thank You! Happy Anniversary! Vipul iCoolCreate iSmiledYou
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I have just created these 2 foam boards, both 18'' x 24''. Yet one appears to cost 50.44 $, the other 38.80 $. Why is that? 🙄
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Hello, I have products (around 60) posted since April with an average of 1-5 views each. My zRank is 4 and 100% store set up. What could I be doing wrong.? These are wedding invitations for autumn. Is there a way to see on the product page that the listing is indexed? I heard someone explain the tags highlighted in blue means it has been indexed. I am new to Zazzle and looking for some advice. Thanks in advance.
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I just had a sale that was *not* referred but it still ended up with the percentage as if it had been referred by 3rd party. The final earnings were cut nearly in half as if it was 3rd party referred and not "None" like it was. Anyone else see this issue today? This was on an 80 invitation order.
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Someone gave me a Zazzle-made acrylic tumbler as a gift. The print quality is great, and so is the quality of the tumbler. I use it every day. The only drawback is the tumblers have to be hand washed to preserve the printed design. But that’s really no biggie. I like this product so much that I’m considering creating a variety of designs to sell on them. But before I put in a lot of effort, I wanted to ask you all if you’ve successfully sold this product. So, what’s been your experience with selling acrylic tumblers? Thanks!!
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