Upload the best file you have
Start with the original photo, exported artwork, scan, or download instead of a screenshot when possible.
The honest answer depends on pixel dimensions, crop, compression, and how large you want to print. Frameable helps you check before you order.
Quick answer
The honest answer depends on pixel dimensions, crop, compression, and how large you want to print. Frameable helps you check before you order.
Upload to checkUpload an image on the checker page to read dimensions in your browser, or enter width and height manually if you already know them.
Open checkerThe problem
A file can look sharp on screen and still fail in print because a screen is small, backlit, and forgiving. Large paper exposes missing pixels.
Use the upload-first checker for dimensions and recommendations, then move to the upscaler if the file is too small for the wall size you want.
How it works
Start with the original photo, exported artwork, scan, or download instead of a screenshot when possible.
Frameable looks at pixel dimensions, aspect ratio, and realistic wall-art sizes before you choose a product.
If the file needs help, the AI upscaler creates a sharper proof you can inspect before checkout.
Move from the proof into a framed print, print-only order, canvas print, or digital file option.
Recommended next actions
Common questions
Divide the photo pixels by the print inches. Around 200 DPI is crisp for wall art, while 150 DPI can work from a normal viewing distance.
Usually, yes if you use the original camera-roll file. Screenshots, text-message copies, and social saves are often smaller.
Use a smaller print size or upscale before ordering. Frameable shows recommended next steps before checkout.