This article is the practical follow-up to our Aspect Ratio vs. Print Size guide. That post explains the difference. This one is about what to do next when your artwork does not fit neatly into a standard size.
If you are working with a custom piece, an odd frame size, or a file that needs a little extra planning, the calculator can help you compare options before you order.
When This Tool Is Most Helpful
This is most helpful when you already know the shape of the artwork, but you still need to decide what size makes sense for printing and framing.
It is especially useful when a piece is close to a standard size but not quite there, or when you want to keep the composition intact without guessing.
Test unusual artwork sizes before choosing a final print size.
See when adding white space works better than trimming the artwork.
Compare options before important edges or details get cut off.
How to Use It
Think of this as a planning tool. It helps you check your artwork size, compare likely fits, and make a decision before checkout.
Enter the width and height to see what ratio family your artwork falls into.
See whether your piece works well at a common size or needs a custom approach.
Use the tool first, then upload your final file on the order page when you are ready.
What You Can Figure Out Here
Start with your original dimensions. From there, you can see whether your artwork fits a common size, whether it needs a little extra white space, or whether a custom size makes more sense.
- Check odd sizes like 11x14, 12x12, or long panoramic pieces.
- Compare options before cropping important parts of the artwork.
- Use it as a final check before you place your order.
This tool helps you plan your print, but it does not send your files to us. We only receive your file when you upload it on the Monochrome Canvas website as part of an actual order.
When a Standard Size Is Not the Best Fit
Not every piece needs to be pushed into the nearest ready-made size. Sometimes the better choice is to keep the original proportion and work backward from the artwork instead of the frame.
That might mean choosing a custom print size, allowing for matting or a border, or picking a frame that respects the composition instead of forcing a crop.
Common Examples
These are the kinds of situations where the calculator becomes especially useful:
Instead of guessing, you can compare options and choose the size that keeps the artwork looking the way you intended.
Use the Calculator First, Then Order
The goal is not just to make artwork fit a frame. It is to make sure the finished piece still feels balanced and true to the original, even when the size is a little unusual.
Use the calculator to narrow down your best size before checkout. If you want a second opinion on sizing, cropping, borders, or custom dimensions, message us at Monochrome Canvas. We are always happy to help.
Test your options here first, then upload your chosen file on the order page when you are ready.