Introducing
We are also on Etsy under MySwagDigital
We make things that work better and last longer. Our products solve real problems with clean design and honest materials.
We make things that work better and last longer. Our products solve real problems with clean design and honest materials.
A scenic view through the bridge by Feeboards
Autumn Forest Path Wall Art – Golden Fall Woodland Print by Feeboards llc
Autumn Garden Path Wall Art – Elegant Fall Landscape Print by Feeboards llc
Autumn Garden Path with Bench – Serene Fall Landscape Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Autumn Woodland Lodge Retreat – Rustic Cabin Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Baby Blue Bunny by Feeboards llc
Black Kitten Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Black Labrador Wall Art Print – Elegant Studio Portrait by Feeboards llc
Black Panther Power – Dramatic Wildlife Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Black Panther – Futuristic Mechanical Wildlife Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Blooming Garden Greenhouse – Floral Paradise Wall Art (Digital Download) by Feeboards llc
Blossom Garden Path Wall Art – Romantic Pink Tree Landscape Print by Feeboards llc
Bold Pop Art Presidential Portrait – Modern Political Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Chipmunks Coffee with Friends by Feeboards llc
Classic Presidential Portrait – Timeless Oil Painting Style by Feeboards llc
Coffee Room X Kitchen by Feeboards llc
A scenic view through the bridge by Feeboards
Autumn Forest Path Wall Art – Golden Fall Woodland Print by Feeboards llc
Autumn Garden Path Wall Art – Elegant Fall Landscape Print by Feeboards llc
Autumn Garden Path with Bench – Serene Fall Landscape Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Autumn Woodland Lodge Retreat – Rustic Cabin Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Baby Blue Bunny by Feeboards llc
Black Kitten Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Black Labrador Wall Art Print – Elegant Studio Portrait by Feeboards llc
Black Panther Power – Dramatic Wildlife Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Black Panther – Futuristic Mechanical Wildlife Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Blooming Garden Greenhouse – Floral Paradise Wall Art (Digital Download) by Feeboards llc
Blossom Garden Path Wall Art – Romantic Pink Tree Landscape Print by Feeboards llc
Bold Pop Art Presidential Portrait – Modern Political Wall Art by Feeboards llc
Chipmunks Coffee with Friends by Feeboards llc
Classic Presidential Portrait – Timeless Oil Painting Style by Feeboards llc
Coffee Room X Kitchen by Feeboards llc
When you purchase AI-generated art, you generally own the physical or digital copy of the file, but you typically do not own the copyright. Under current U.S. law, copyright protection requires "human authorship," meaning works created entirely by an AI algorithm are considered to be in the public domain and cannot be copyrighted by any person or company.
Key Takeaway
Buying AI art transfers possession (the file or print), not the bundle of exclusive copyright rights (reproduction, distribution, derivative works, public display). Because fully machine-generated outputs lack human authorship, they enter the public domain by default under current interpretations.
Why This Matters for Buyers
If you buy an AI-generated poster from a marketplace, you can print it, hang it, or resell the physical copy. But you cannot claim infringement against someone else who independently generates or downloads the same AI image, unless you have added protectable, human-created elements and registered those specific elements.
The Nuances of AI Copyright Laws
The following points summarize how U.S. copyright doctrine treats works created with or by artificial intelligence systems, and what that means for purchasers and creators who rely on text-to-image models and similar tools.Break
The U.S. Copyright Office and federal courts have repeatedly ruled that only humans can be "authors". Because AI generates the final expressive elements based on its training, it is viewed as the "mechanical creator" rather than a tool used by a human author.Interpretation: Where a system autonomously determines expressive elements — composition, lighting, brushstrokes, and other creative choices — the output is not considered the expression of a human author. Registration will be refused for the AI-generated parts, and any protectable claim must identify and limit itself to human-created contributions.Evidence practices: Applicants increasingly submit process notes, layer files, and timestamps to distinguish human vs. machine contributions. The Office expects clear disclosure of non-human content; omission can jeopardize a registration.
Providing a detailed text prompt is currently seen as giving "general instructions" to an artist rather than exercising creative control. The Supreme Court recently declined to review this rule, leaving the "human authorship" standard firmly in place as of March 2026.Implication: Even sophisticated prompting and iterative refinement rarely crosses the line into protectable authorship unless the human’s contribution manifests in fixed, original expression separate from the system’s autonomous output.
Hybrid Works and How Copyright Can Attach
You can claim copyright for specific parts of a work if you have added sufficient human creativity. In practice, this means copyright may cover the human-authored elements layered onto or combined with AI outputs, but not the underlying AI-generated material itself.
Registration tip: When filing, identify the AI-generated portions as excluded material and claim only the new human contributions (e.g., “text, selection and arrangement, and retouching”). This clarifies scope and reduces risk of cancellation.Enforcement reality: Infringement actions will hinge on copying of your human-authored elements (layout, text, retouches). Others may still use the same underlying AI image from the public domain, so long as they do not copy your protected additions.
Platform Terms of Service and Your Commercial Rights
While the law may not grant copyright, the specific AI platform used to create the art (e.g., Midjourney or DALL-E) has its own terms of service that dictate your commercial usage rights and whether they claim any ownership over the generated content.Contract vs. copyright: Platform licenses and terms are private agreements. They can grant you broad permissions (e.g., to sell prints or merchandise) or impose restrictions (e.g., attribution, commercial tiers) regardless of the public-domain status of the output. These permissions do not transform AI-generated content into copyrighted works; they simply define what you and the platform agree you may do.
Practical due diligence: Keep records of prompts, versions, edits, and any human-authored additions. Maintain copies of the platform’s terms in effect on your creation date and document any licenses or releases for downstream partners.
Actionable Guidance for Buyers and Creators
Whether you are purchasing AI art or producing it for clients, structure your workflow to separate unprotectable machine output from protectable human authorship, and make sure contracts reflect that distinction.
Bottom line: Purchasing AI-generated art gives you the copy, not the copyright. To obtain enforceable rights, incorporate and document sufficient human creativity, and rely on clear, well-drafted agreements and platform licenses for any commercial uses beyond personal enjoyment.
Can I use these AI images/ebooks for commercial projects? Yes, you can generally use AI-generated images and ebooks for commercial projects, but this is subject to the specific licensing terms of the tool used to create them. Most major platforms, such as Midjourney, DALL·E 3, and Adobe Firefly, grant commercial usage rights to users, often tied to a paid subscription. This opening clarification sets the stage: commercial use is commonly allowed, but it is never unconditional—your rights are defined by the platform’s license you accept when generating or downloading content. Therefore, always review the latest Terms of Service and license summaries for any platform you rely upon in production.Licensing Terms and Commercial Grant: While commercial use is widely granted, it is typically provided under a non-exclusive license. This means that while you have the right to use the content for profit (e.g., in marketing, on merchandise, or within ebooks), you do not have exclusive ownership or full copyright protection over the raw AI output in many jurisdictions, including the US. In practice, non-exclusive licensing implies the same or similar content can be licensed to many users simultaneously, and you cannot prevent others from also exploiting comparable outputs.BreakCommercial Use Granted: Most platforms allow you to sell products featuring AI images or use them in business branding. This includes common scenarios like using AI visuals for ads, social posts, packaging, app UI illustrations, ebook covers, internal presentations, and client deliverables, provided your subscription or plan level includes commercial usage rights. Some platforms may differentiate between personal and commercial tiers; ensure your account is on the appropriate plan to avoid license non-compliance.Copyright Limitations: Purely AI-generated content often cannot be copyrighted, meaning you may have limited legal grounds to stop others from using similar outputs. This is a crucial operational risk for brands and creators who value exclusivity. Because many generative models can produce overlapping or near-identical images from similar prompts, your ability to claim originality or prevent parallel use is constrained. As such, consider whether your business use cases truly require exclusivity; if they do, you may need to commission bespoke human-made elements, acquire exclusive stock licenses, or negotiate custom terms where available.Human Modification: To gain stronger legal protection, it is recommended to add substantial human creative input, such as significant editing, retouching, or incorporating the AI output into a larger original work. The more you transform, curate, and design around the AI asset—through composition, typography, color grading, photobashing with owned assets, or narrative integration in ebooks—the stronger your claim to protectable authorship for the combined work may become. Keep detailed records of your creative process and drafts to evidence human authorship. When possible, layer AI content with original photography, illustration, or text that you own outright to build defensible value.
Understanding Non-Exclusive Licenses and Practical Implications
Licensing Terms and Commercial Grant: While commercial use is widely granted, it is typically provided under a non-exclusive license. This means that while you have the right to use the content for profit (e.g., in marketing, on merchandise, or within ebooks), you do not have exclusive ownership or full copyright protection over the raw AI output in many jurisdictions, including the US. In the real world, non-exclusivity translates into shared access—others can generate, license, and exploit similar outputs without infringing your rights because neither you nor the platform is granting exclusivity for a given image or text.BreakCommercial Use Granted: Most platforms allow you to sell products featuring AI images or use them in business branding. However, platform-specific caveats may exist, such as prohibitions on using outputs to train competing models, restrictions on certain sensitive content categories, or attribution requirements on lower-tier plans. Review plan comparisons: paid tiers often broaden rights, remove attribution requirements, and authorize higher-volume or merchandising uses that personal tiers do not. When building a product line (e.g., print-on-demand posters, apparel, or ebook bundles), verify whether your intended distribution channels and sales volume are covered under the plan’s scope.Copyright Limitations: Purely AI-generated content often cannot be copyrighted, meaning you may have limited legal grounds to stop others from using similar outputs. Courts and agencies in several jurisdictions have indicated that works lacking human authorship are not eligible for copyright protection. Consequently, your risk posture should assume that rivals might parallel your creative direction with comparable prompts. Consider building defensible moats with trademarks (for your brand names, logos you designed with human input), trade dress (consistent packaging layouts), or proprietary story worlds in ebooks authored by humans.Human Modification: To gain stronger legal protection, it is recommended to add substantial human creative input, such as significant editing, retouching, or incorporating the AI output into a larger original work. Think in terms of deliberate, original choices: unique compositions, layered assets, distinctive typography systems, custom palettes, and narrative structures that go beyond surface-level tweaks. The more distinct and expressive your human choices, the stronger the argument that the combined work bears protectable authorship. Where feasible, maintain project files (PSD/AI/INDD), prompt logs, and revision notes to document your contributions.
From Policy to Practice: Using AI Content Safely in Business
Can I use these AI images/ebooks for commercial projects? Yes—subject to the licensing terms of the tool used to create them. Most major platforms, such as Midjourney, DALL·E 3, and Adobe Firefly, grant commercial usage rights to users, often tied to a paid subscription. In practice, this means you can incorporate AI visuals across your marketing stack, embed them into ebooks, and merchandise them, provided you operate within your plan’s allowances and comply with any attribution or content restrictions explicitly stated by the provider.Licensing Terms and Commercial Grant: Under non-exclusive licenses, you gain permission to monetize outputs but not exclusivity over them. This arrangement suits many marketing and design workflows where novelty and speed matter more than ownership. However, brands seeking differentiation should layer AI assets with custom brand systems, original copywriting, and human-made components. If exclusivity is mission-critical (e.g., for luxury packaging or flagship campaigns), consult counsel about supplementary rights strategies, including commissioning original photography/illustration or negotiating enterprise terms if available.Commercial Use Granted: Most platforms allow you to sell products featuring AI images or use them in business branding. Operationally, create an internal checklist: confirm plan level; capture screenshots or receipts of license coverage; archive prompts and generation timestamps; and run outputs through internal reviews for trademarks, likeness rights, and sensitive content flags. For ebooks, ensure that any included third-party text, fonts, or stock elements are properly licensed and that your human-authored narrative remains central to the work’s protectability.Human Modification: To gain stronger legal protection, add substantial human creative input—significant editing, retouching, or incorporating the AI output into a larger original work. For images, that could mean compositing with owned photography, custom illustration overlays, unique art direction, and typographic systems. For ebooks, integrate AI images within an original, human-authored structure: chapters, research synthesis, analysis, and distinctive voice. This integrated approach not only strengthens potential protectability but also differentiates your offering in crowded markets where many rely on similar prompts.
Key Takeaways and Actionable Next Steps
Can I use these AI images/ebooks for commercial projects? Yes—generally permitted by major platforms like Midjourney, DALL·E 3, and Adobe Firefly, typically with a paid subscription. Always validate the specific licensing terms before publishing or selling. Keep a central register of the tools you use and their current license summaries, and schedule periodic reviews, since terms can change.Licensing Terms and Commercial Grant: Expect non-exclusive licenses. You can profit from AI outputs, but you will not gain exclusive ownership over the raw AI-generated work in many jurisdictions, including the US. Plan for the possibility that others may create similar outputs. For brand-sensitive contexts, build layered originality using human-created components and consider alternative IP protections (trademarks, trade dress) alongside any copyright claims available for your human-authored contributions.Commercial Use Granted: Most platforms allow you to sell products featuring AI images or use them in business branding. Implement process controls: confirm your subscription level covers the intended use; document provenance (prompts, generation IDs, timestamps); screen for potential infringement issues; and archive final proofs. For ebooks, ensure that editorial oversight, citations, and human-authored analysis constitute substantial portions of the content to enhance quality and potential protectability of the combined work.Human Modification: To gain stronger legal protection, add substantial human creative input—significant editing, retouching, or integrating outputs into larger original works. Treat AI as a creative accelerator, not a destination. Your distinctive taste, editorial decisions, and craftsmanship are what transform commoditized outputs into assets with enduring value. Coupled with diligent licensing compliance and documentation, this approach helps you harness AI’s speed without sacrificing legal prudence or brand integrity.
Direct Answer: Every piece in this collection is a [YOUR ART STYLE, e.g., Original Abstract Painting] created to be a one-of-a-kind addition to your home. Unlike mass-produced decor, this artwork is [Hand-Painted / Digitally Rendered / etc.] by the artist, ensuring that no two pieces are identical in their texture, depth, or soul. Limited Availability: To further protect the uniqueness of your investment, we offer many works as [Limited Edition Prints] or [Signed Originals]. Once a limited series is sold out, it is retired forever, guaranteeing that your wall features a rare perspective rather than a common commodity. Authenticity: Each purchase includes a [Certificate of Authenticity] or [Artist's Signature], verifying its origin and its status as a genuine work of art from [YOUR BRAND NAME].Context and framing: In an era of algorithmic sameness and mass replication, collectors increasingly value artworks that carry unmistakable signals of individuality—gesture, materiality, and intentional imperfection. By explicitly positioning your works as singular expressions, you set clear expectations for scarcity, emotional resonance, and long-term value. This slide articulates three reinforcing pillars of uniqueness: the creative act (how the work is made), the market structure (how availability is limited), and the provenance (how authenticity is certified). Together, these pillars communicate that a similar image is not the same artwork—because the artist’s hand, process history, and certified origin are inseparable from the piece’s identity.
BreakSignature Techniques: We break through market saturation by leaning into a proprietary creative process that combines [List 1-2 Unique Techniques, e.g., palette knife layering and natural pigment mixing]. By focusing on these distinct methods, we create visual textures that cannot be replicated by automated filters or standard manufacturing. Bespoke Development: Our process begins with [Personal Inspiration Source, e.g., local landscape studies or emotional storytelling], ensuring every composition starts from a place of authentic expression rather than following generic trends. Quality Over Quantity: We prioritize a "Right First Time" mentality, investing significant time into the [Materials Selection and Layering] of each piece. This meticulous approach ensures that every artwork possesses a level of detail—from the way light interacts with the pigments to the precision of the lines—that stands out in a crowded digital marketplace.Why this matters: Distinctiveness is not an afterthought; it is engineered through technique, origin, and discipline. Techniques form the tactile signature. Inspiration forms the narrative signature. Quality control forms the optical signature. When these three signatures converge, they create non-fungible character—subtle edge breaks, pigment pooling, tool marks, pressure variations, and rhythm in composition—that industrial processes cannot convincingly counterfeit at scale. Additionally, beginning from lived or researched inspiration resists trend-chasing and fosters bodies of work that evolve coherently over time, increasing curatorial value for collectors who prize continuity and growth.
Limited Availability: To further protect the uniqueness of your investment, we offer many works as [Limited Edition Prints] or [Signed Originals]. Once a limited series is sold out, it is retired forever, guaranteeing that your wall features a rare perspective rather than a common commodity. Authenticity: Each purchase includes a [Certificate of Authenticity] or [Artist's Signature], verifying its origin and its status as a genuine work of art from [YOUR BRAND NAME]. These practices elevate trust and signal to collectors that scarcity and provenance are not marketing flourishes but operational commitments backed by transparent documentation.
Practical guidance for collectors: Ask to see the edition ledger, proof hierarchy, and COA template. Confirm that each print or original is accompanied by consistent identifiers: matching numbers on the work, on the COA, and in the studio archives. Evaluate framing and conservation recommendations to protect the integrity of pigments and substrates over time. These steps ensure that the artwork you acquire remains as singular in the future as it is today—visually, materially, and historically.
Our creative process follows a human-in-the-loop model, ensuring that technology serves as a tool for human expression rather than a replacement for it. We prioritize ethical creation through these core steps. By keeping a human at the helm, we ensure that our art remains grounded in human values, creativity, and accountability. This slide introduces the philosophy behind our practice and sets the stage for the detailed, step-by-step safeguards we use to maintain both artistic integrity and ethical responsibility.
Human-in-the-loop means a human artist directs each phase of ideation, iteration, and finishing. AI is leveraged as a controlled instrument, not as an autonomous creator. The intent is to amplify a human artist’s originality while preserving authorship, consent, and cultural respect. This approach rejects the practice of scraping or mimicking living artists’ distinctive styles without permission, and instead focuses on human-led authorship supported by transparent, accountable use of technology.Ethical creation also demands clarity with audiences and clients about the role AI plays in the final image. We explain which parts are machine-assisted and which parts are handcrafted. Where possible, we select model providers that commit to licensed or public-domain training sets and offer opt-out or compensation programs. We pair those choices with rigorous, manual quality control to eliminate biased tropes and aesthetic artifacts that can appear in raw AI outputs.In practical terms, our workflow is an iterative loop: a human artist sets the concept, AI assists with generation, the human critiques and refines, and the cycle repeats until the artwork meets our standards. Final delivery always includes human finishing touches—manual paint-overs, compositional adjustments, and color work—to ensure the piece is truly ours. The following slides expand on each safeguard in detail, explaining how they reinforce originality, accuracy, transparency, and respect for creators and communities.Break
Human-Led Ideation: Every piece begins with a human artist's unique vision, sketches, or specific creative direction. We do not use AI to "copy" or "imitate" the distinct styles of living artists. In practice, this means that the initial creative spark—narrative intent, mood, symbolic choices, and visual motifs—comes from our artists. They gather references they have rights to use, explore composition thumbnails, and define the emotional arc of the piece before any model is invoked. This ensures the generative system follows a path set by a person rather than defaulting to generic, trend-chasing imagery.
We reject prompts that explicitly request replication of living artists’ recognizable styles, brushwork, or signatures. Instead, we emphasize technique- and subject-oriented language (e.g., lighting setups, material properties, camera lenses, historical movements in the public domain) paired with original narrative direction. This keeps the work rooted in personal authorship, protects contemporary creators, and encourages the evolution of a distinct house style over time.The ideation phase also includes feasibility checks and ethical red lines. We avoid concepts that risk misappropriation of cultural heritage, violate likeness rights, or trivialize sensitive topics. Where relevant, we consult with subject-matter stakeholders or community advisors. The outcome is a creative brief that articulates intent, constraints, and references with clear provenance, so that subsequent AI assistance remains anchored to human judgment and ethical boundaries.This front-loaded human authorship frames everything that follows. When the human defines the vision, later steps—guidance, oversight, and finishing—become targeted acts of craft rather than after-the-fact fixes. The result is artwork that feels intentional, owned, and accountable.Break
Active Guidance & Prompting: Our artists use their subject-matter expertise to craft detailed, original prompts. This ensures the AI output is a reflection of intentional human judgment and brand-specific tone. Prompting is treated as creative direction: we specify narrative stakes, composition anchors, shot language, material behavior, and color psychology. We also define exclusions—for instance, avoiding stereotypical depictions, over-sexualization, or biased occupational assignments—to keep generations aligned with our values.
We iterate in small batches and version-control our prompts. Each change is documented with rationale—what we hoped to achieve and what we learned from the output. This disciplined approach reduces drift, improves reproducibility, and helps us teach new team members how to prompt responsibly. We complement text prompts with structured inputs such as reference sketches (created by us), segmentation maps, or depth cues to keep the generator grounded in our compositions.Brand guardianship is embedded into the prompt layer. We encode voice and visual DNA (typography pointers for typographic mockups, palette constraints, contrast targets for accessibility, and motion principles for animated outputs). When the model supports it, we use fine-tuning with consented and licensed material only. Otherwise, we rely on prompt engineering and post-processing to meet brand standards without risking unethical data use.Throughout this phase, the artist remains the arbiter of quality. The AI is a sketch partner delivering variations on demand, but the decisions that matter—what to keep, what to change, and what to discard—are made by a human.Break
Proactive Oversight & Refinement: We treat AI-generated images as rough drafts. Our team manually reviews every output to correct inconsistencies, remove biases, and ensure the final product meets high-quality artistic standards. The review rubric spans technical fidelity (anatomy, perspective, lighting coherence), narrative clarity, and ethical risk (stereotype reinforcement, privacy concerns, unlicensed likeness). We flag and discard outputs that fail these checks, even if they appear visually striking at a glance.
Bias remediation is hands-on. We adjust prompts, regenerate selective regions, and use inpainting or outpainting to rebalance representation. If a scene defaults to narrow demographics, we recompose to reflect inclusive casts where contextually appropriate. We also examine symbolic elements to avoid unintended cultural or political connotations. Compositing tools help us repair warped geometry, refine fabric behavior, and ensure realistic interactions between characters and environments.Quality assurance is iterative. Each pass generates notes that feed back into the next round of prompting or manual edits. We track issues like hand topology, text rendering, micro-contrast noise, and specular highlights to eliminate common artifacts. When a model’s limitations make a target unreliable, we pivot techniques—using multiple models, procedural assets, or traditional illustration—to uphold standards without compromise.This vigilance sustains accountability. Treating the model’s output as a draft preserves the primacy of human craftsmanship and keeps the final image aligned with both intent and ethics.
Ethical Sourcing and Transparency
Ethical Sourcing & Transparency: We prioritize AI platforms that use licensed or public domain training data where possible. By being fully transparent about our use of AI, we maintain an honest dialogue with our community. We vet vendors for consent processes, DMCA responsiveness, dataset documentation, and the availability of creator opt-outs or revenue sharing. When necessary, we self-host models whose training provenance we understand and can communicate clearly.
Transparency is practical as well as principled. Project deliverables include process notes describing where AI contributed, what was hand-made, and which tools were used. If a client requires disclosures or watermarks, we provide them. Internally, we maintain an audit trail: model versions, parameter seeds (when available), and major prompt milestones. This record supports reproducibility, attribution, and ethical reviews.We avoid training or fine-tuning on third-party artworks without explicit permission. When we draw on public-domain corpora, we verify authenticity and applicable jurisdictional terms. For culturally sensitive materials, we seek guidance to respect context and community norms. These practices help ensure our outputs don’t benefit from exploitation and that our community understands and trusts our methods.Open communication builds resilience. If concerns arise about a piece, we can explain provenance and make corrections swiftly. This trust is central to sustainable, ethical creative work.Break
Manual Post-Processing: The "human" part of the loop often includes manual digital painting, color grading, and composition adjustments to make the final artwork truly our own. Beyond cosmetic tweaks, this stage is where authorship is crystalized. Artists resolve edge quality, paint micro-detail, harmonize lighting, and enforce storytelling beats through focal hierarchy and silhouette design. We refine typography, accessibility contrast, and export color profiles to ensure the work reads well across media.
We use layer-based workflows so that every decision is reversible and documented. Techniques include: paint-overs to correct anatomy and material response; gradient mapping and LUTs for color mood; selective dodging/burning to guide attention; and camera-space effects (depth of field, motion blur) where appropriate. For 3D-assisted pieces, we bake lighting passes and composite them with hand-painted accents to retain a crafted feel.Final checks confirm ethical and quality goals: alt text for accessibility when the artwork is published online, captions describing AI’s role, and metadata that reflects our process. The piece is only approved when it satisfies the original brief and our responsibility standards. This is where the loop closes—the image is not merely generated; it is authored.This stage differentiates our work from raw generations and safeguards the integrity of the finished art object.
Summary: Human at the Helm
By keeping a human at the helm, we ensure that our art remains grounded in human values, creativity, and accountability. Our human-in-the-loop practice spans five safeguards: Human-Led Ideation, Active Guidance & Prompting, Proactive Oversight & Refinement, Ethical Sourcing & Transparency, and Manual Post-Processing. Each safeguard transforms AI from a risk into a responsibly managed instrument for expression.
Human-Led Ideation: Original vision, no imitation of living artists.
Active Guidance & Prompting: Detailed, brand-specific, exclusion-aware instructions.
Proactive Oversight & Refinement: Rigorous review and bias remediation.
Ethical Sourcing & Transparency: Licensed/public-domain data and open disclosure.
Manual Post-Processing: Paint-overs, grading, and composition to make it ours.
BreakThis framework is both principled and practical. It protects contemporary creators, aligns with clients’ brand and legal needs, and produces work that is distinct, reproducible, and trustworthy. The outcome is not just aesthetically strong images, but art that can be defended ethically—backed by process notes, transparent disclosures, and human craftsmanship at every stage.We invite our community to continue the dialogue. Ethical practice is a living commitment that improves through feedback, research, and collaboration.
This presentation provides a structured overview of the most common file formats used for Shopify digital downloads, along with product-specific recommendations. It explains what each format is best for, why it matters to your customers, and how to match formats to product types so buyers can easily use, print, and share their purchases. Keeping file types aligned with customer expectations reduces support requests, improves perceived quality, and streamlines your digital product workflow.PDF (Portable Document Format): The industry standard for digital planners, workbooks, and multipage documents. It is universally compatible and preserves formatting across all devices. Use PDFs when you need consistent layout fidelity across screens and printers, embedded fonts, and optional interactivity like hyperlinks or form fields. For Shopify, PDFs are dependable because customers can open them on virtually any device without extra software.High-Res JPEG/JPG: Ideal for standard photographs and artwork meant for web sharing or casual printing. They offer a good balance between file size and visual quality. Choose high-resolution JPEGs (e.g., 300 DPI for print-ready posters) when you want smaller downloads than PNG but still excellent visual clarity. JPEG is lossy, which compresses files effectively; it is perfect for colorful images and gradients but not for graphics that require transparency.BreakPNG (Portable Network Graphics): Best for graphics that require transparency (like logos or stickers) or high-quality digital illustrations. It is a lossless format, meaning it retains detail better than JPEG but results in larger file sizes. PNG shines for sharp edges, text overlays, UI assets, and any design requiring a transparent background. If your Shopify product previews include mockups with layered elements, PNG helps maintain crispness without haloing artifacts.BreakSVG (Scalable Vector Graphics): The preferred format for icons and vector-based designs. Because they are mathematically based, they can be scaled to any size without losing quality, which is critical for cutting machine files (like Cricut) or professional logos. SVGs are lightweight, editable in vector tools, and scriptable for web use. Provide SVG when customers may need multiple sizes or when precision paths are required for cutters and plotters.BreakZIP Files: Commonly used to bundle multiple file types together into a single download. This is a popular way to offer a "complete package" that includes various sizes or formats for a single product. Zipping is also helpful for organizing collections (e.g., multiple ratios of wall art, or planner inserts by size) and reducing total download time. Consider a clear folder structure and a readme.txt inside to guide customers after extraction.
In summary, match your file format to how customers will use the product: PDFs for reliable, fixed-layout documents; JPEGs for photos and quick prints; PNGs for transparent, high-fidelity graphics; SVGs for infinitely scalable vector artwork and cutting machines; and ZIP archives to package variations together neatly. The following slides map these formats to specific product categories so you can package your Shopify downloads confidently and consistently.
Deep Dive: Visual Formats for Art and Illustrations
High-Res JPEG/JPG: Ideal for standard photographs and artwork meant for web sharing or casual printing. They offer a good balance between file size and visual quality. When distributing printable art as JPEGs, export at the target print size and 300 DPI to ensure clarity. Provide common aspect ratios (e.g., 2:3, 3:4, 4:5, 11:14) as separate files or within a ZIP so customers can print frames like 8x10, 11x14, 16x20 without distortion. JPEG’s compression is most efficient for photographic content; avoid repeatedly re-saving to prevent compound artifacts.PNG (Portable Network Graphics): Best for graphics that require transparency (like logos or stickers) or high-quality digital illustrations. It is a lossless format, meaning it retains detail better than JPEG but results in larger file sizes. PNG supports an alpha channel, which is essential for overlays, stickers, and designs meant to be placed on various backgrounds. For Shopify listing images, PNG can present crisp text and line art with fewer artifacts than JPEG. For downloadable assets, keep color profiles consistent (sRGB for web) to avoid unexpected color shifts across devices.BreakSVG (Scalable Vector Graphics): The preferred format for icons and vector-based designs. Because they are mathematically based, they can be scaled to any size without losing quality, which is critical for cutting machine files (like Cricut) or professional logos. If your product targets crafters using Cricut or Silhouette, include well-organized SVG layers and paths. Consider offering both SVG and PNG previews so customers can visualize the end result before importing into their software. For branding packs, pair SVG (master artwork) with PNG exports for quick drop-in use on social graphics.BreakZIP Files: Commonly used to bundle multiple file types together into a single download. This is a popular way to offer a "complete package" that includes various sizes or formats for a single product. For printable wall art sets, include multiple ratios and a readme listing recommended print sizes. For icon packs, include SVG (editable) plus PNG exports at key sizes (e.g., 256, 512, 1024 px). Clear filenames like artworkname_2x3_24x36.jpg or iconname_512.png improve customer experience and reduce support tickets.
Practical tip: In product descriptions, specify the included formats and dimensions. Example: “You will receive a ZIP containing 5 high-res JPEGs (2:3, 3:4, 4:5, 5:7, 11:14) at 300 DPI and a PNG with transparent background.” This clarity sets correct expectations and builds trust.
Practical tip: In product descriptions, specify the included formats and dimensions. Example: “You will receive a ZIP containing 5 high-res JPEGs (2:3, 3:4, 4:5, 5:7, 11:14) at 300 DPI and a PNG with transparent background.” This clarity sets correct expectations and builds trust.
Recommended Formats by Product Type
The following guidance maps common Shopify digital products to the most appropriate file formats and explains the reasoning so you can package files consistently and set customer expectations clearly.Product TypeRecommended FormatsWhy?Printable Wall ArtPDF, High-Res JPEGPDF ensures correct print dimensions; JPEG is universally easy to open.Digital PlannersInteractive PDFSupports clickable hyperlinks for navigation in apps like GoodNotes.Logos & IconsSVG, PNGSVG for infinite scaling; PNG for transparent backgrounds.Templates (Canva)PDF (with link)Often delivered as a PDF containing the direct link to the editable Canva template. Add RowTab in the last cell inserts new row belowPDF (with link) for Canva templates: Often delivered as a PDF containing the direct link to the editable Canva template. This guarantees the buyer reaches the correct design, even if you update assets later. Include notes about required fonts and brand usage rights. For enterprise buyers or teams, consider adding a second page with brand kit import instructions.For Logos & Icons, pair SVG masters with PNG exports in common sizes and color variants (light/dark). For Digital Planners, emphasize that the file is an Interactive PDF and list compatible apps. For Printable Wall Art, include both PDF for exact dimensions and a high-res JPEG for convenience; mention suggested print sizes and paper types in your product description. Providing both format breadth and clear labeling improves customer satisfaction while minimizing support workload.
Bundling and Delivery Best Practices
ZIP Files: Commonly used to bundle multiple file types together into a single download. This is a popular way to offer a "complete package" that includes various sizes or formats for a single product. When bundling, use a clear folder schema, for example: /Wall-Art/2x3/, /3x4/, /4x5/, and include both PDF and JPEG variants. Add a readme that outlines what’s included, recommended printing guidance, licensing terms, and contact information for support. This not only clarifies the contents but also demonstrates professionalism.File naming conventions: Adopt descriptive, consistent names such as productname_ratio_size.extension (e.g., SunrisePrint_2x3_24x36.jpg). Use hyphens or underscores and avoid spaces to reduce issues on certain operating systems. Include versioning where products receive updates (v1_1, v2_0) and keep a changelog in the readme so returning customers understand improvements.Quality and color management: For print-focused products, export at 300 DPI with appropriate color profiles. For screens, default to sRGB. Avoid over-compressing JPEGs; a quality setting of 80–90 often balances size and fidelity. For PNGs, consider PNG-8 for simple graphics to reduce size, but use PNG-24 for gradients or complex illustrations. For vector SVGs, simplify paths, remove unused metadata, and ensure strokes expand correctly for cutting machines where relevant.Customer guidance and support: In your Shopify product description, reiterate included formats and recommended apps. Consider an FAQ section for common questions like “How do I unzip files on iOS?” or “How do I import an Interactive PDF into GoodNotes?” Link to a short tutorial video or help article. Clear, proactive documentation reduces refunds and boosts reviews.
Quick Reference Summary
PDF (Portable Document Format): The industry standard for digital planners, workbooks, and multipage documents. It is universally compatible and preserves formatting across all devices. Use PDFs when you need dependable, fixed layouts, interactive links, or printable documents with precise dimensions.High-Res JPEG/JPG: Ideal for standard photographs and artwork meant for web sharing or casual printing. They offer a good balance between file size and visual quality. Prefer JPEG for colorful photographic content where transparency isn’t required.PNG (Portable Network Graphics): Best for graphics that require transparency (like logos or stickers) or high-quality digital illustrations. It is a lossless format, meaning it retains detail better than JPEG but results in larger file sizes. Use PNG for crisp edges, overlays, and UI assets.SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics): The preferred format for icons and vector-based designs. Because they are mathematically based, they can be scaled to any size without losing quality, which is critical for cutting machine files (like Cricut) or professional logos. Provide SVG when customers need flexible resizing or precise cutting paths.ZIP Files: Commonly used to bundle multiple file types together into a single download. This is a popular way to offer a "complete package" that includes various sizes or formats for a single product. Clear folder naming and a brief readme elevate the customer experience.
1. Order the product with an instant download.
2. Receive the download in your email.
3. Click on the download in your email.
The most common digital downloads will be 300 dpi. They will be high resolution and print ready.
This will come down to the specs for large canvas printing. 300 dpi is the standard for the sharpest results. A PNG or TIFF files give best results. We use PNG files to ensure quality for our customers.
Customizing AI-generated content usually involves either iterating on the prompt to guide the AI toward a new result or using in-platform editing tools to make direct changes to the output. This presentation expands each path with actionable tactics, examples, and tool-specific notes so you can control subject, style, composition, and final polish without losing creative intent or quality.
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Tip: Keep a running log of the exact prompts and edits you apply. Reusable prompt fragments (e.g., "pastel color palette, soft rim light, film grain 10%") make future iterations faster and more consistent across campaigns or slide decks.Break
The simplest way to "customize" is to tell the AI what to change in the next version. Iterative prompting lets you progressively lock in composition, subject accuracy, and stylistic fidelity. Think of each generation as a draft: you compare it against your intent, then add precise constraints for the next pass.Break
How to iterate with intent: Start broad (subject + setting + style). Inspect results and tighten constraints (lighting, palette, camera angle, texture). Use negative prompts to exclude unwanted elements (e.g., "no text, no watermark, no extra limbs"). Preserve successful phrasing and only change one or two variables per round so you can attribute what worked.
Quality checks between iterations: Confirm anatomy/proportions, edge cleanliness, and background artifacts. Zoom to 200% to catch AI seams. If a composition element keeps failing (e.g., hand position), reframe the shot (different pose or crop) rather than endlessly retrying the same angle.
2. Use Built-in AI Editing Tools
Many platforms now include tools that let you edit parts of an image without regenerating the whole thing. This approach is ideal for targeted fixes, product swaps, quick cleanups, or layout-specific adjustments in a near-final design. These tools speed up iteration while preserving the overall look you already like.
BreakWorkflow example: Duplicate your layer, mask the target area, and run Generative Fill with a concise directive ("replace red hat with gold crown, realistic metal, soft reflections"). Validate edges and shadows. Then upscale the final composite to your delivery size to avoid softness from earlier edits.
Troubleshooting: If fills look blurry, increase prompt specificity for material and lighting. If cutouts show halos, expand the selection by 1–3px before removal. For warped text after edits, rasterize the effect layer and re-apply perspective so it matches the scene.Break
If you generated a design template (like a presentation or social post), you can usually edit it like any other file. Treat the AI output as a starting system for typography, spacing, and color, then tailor content blocks and assets to your brand guidelines. This offers the fastest route to production-ready deliverables across multiple formats.
Links: Adobe Express Template Generator: https://www.adobe.com/express/create/ai/template-generator | Canva Magic Design: within Canva editor | Gamma: in-app AI toolbar.BreakVersioning strategy: Create a master template with locked brand tokens (colors, type scales, logo clearspace). Derive channel-specific variants (IG Story, LinkedIn post, presentation cover) by swapping grid and hierarchy, not core brand elements. Keep a shared library of reusable AI prompts for on-brand illustrations.
Enter inserts new line belowAccessibility pass: Ensure color contrast meets WCAG AA. Provide alt text for any decorative imagery repurposed as informative. For motion templates, add reduced-motion variants. Export text as live text (not flattened) so screen readers can parse it.
4. Export for External Editing
For high-level customization, download your AI art and move it into professional software. External apps provide precision controls (layers, paths, non-destructive adjustments) that many generators don’t yet offer. This is the best path for logo-ready vectors, complex retouching, or detailed compositing for print and large-format displays.
BreakPractical pipeline: Export the highest-quality source (PNG/TIFF for raster, SVG if available). In Photoshop, separate foreground/background, rebuild shadows on new layers, and use adjustment layers for color alignment across a set. In Illustrator, use Image Trace as a starting point, then manually refine anchor points, expand appearance, and establish a clean path hierarchy for scale-agnostic output.Link references: Adobe Photoshop (AI painting generator info): https://www.adobe.com/products/firefly/features/ai-painting-generator.html
Delivery checklist: Verify resolution at final size (300 PPI for print, 72–150 PPI for digital signage as needed). Convert to target color space (CMYK for print, sRGB for web). Embed or outline fonts. Include bleed and safe areas for print and responsive crops for social. Archive the prompt, seeds, and edit notes alongside source files.
Yes, you can ask for a custom AI art commission. A custom commission allows you to create specific prompts, themes, or use images to create a complete new piece of artwork that you created. This often includes:
Every ebook needs to be created with the creator overseeing the product to the end. The creator has to
Fact Check: All stats, statistics, claims, and references need to be double checked.
Tone and Voice: Ai still needs the human touch to make it feel more human than it does to this point.
Structural Polishing: The flow of the ebook is important and needs to be directed by a human.
Final Quality Control: Humans will read the final copy to ensure any and all mistakes are taked out and corrected.
By the time a book is completed, it has been vetted, edited, and polished by a human to ensure it provides reel value.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.
We will work quickly to ship your order as soon as possible. Once your order has shipped, you will receive an email with further information. Delivery times vary depending on your location.