Chronicles by Print Lord

Canva to Press: Exporting Artwork Like a Pro

Aug 14, 2025

Stylish minimalist layout featuring white paper on a gray background with ample copy space.

Canva has become the designer’s secret weapon for quick, good-looking artwork – but when it’s time to send your files to the printer, are your settings up to scratch? Print Lord has fielded more than a few badly exported PDFs in our time, and nothing ruins great design faster than a fuzzy logo or off-brand colour. Consider this your royal guide: how to export from Canva so your print arrives sharp, consistent, and true to your brand – every time.

Why Canva Files Go Wrong at Print

Let’s start with the honest truth: Canva was made for speed and online sharing, not professional press. That means Canva’s default settings often favour web resolution and RGB colours, which are suited to screens – not the ink, paper, and precision demanded by quality print. The result? Soft images. Odd hues. Chopped-off edges. In other words, not what any business wants representing their brand.

But with the right know-how, you can give Canva designs a fighting chance in the print arena. Here’s how local businesses, creative allies, and ambitious marketers can export artwork that makes the Print Lord proud – and your brand sing.

Step-by-Step: How to Export Print-Ready Artwork from Canva

1. Set Your Document Size Correctly

Before you even think about exporting, start right at the very beginning: make sure your Canva document matches the final print size, including bleed. For most professional print jobs, you’ll want to add 3mm bleed on all sides. If you’re designing an A5 flyer (148mm x 210mm), your Canva canvas should be 154mm x 216mm. Canva’s custom size tool lets you input these dimensions manually, so don’t be afraid to get precise.

Top tip: Bleed ensures that when your flyer is trimmed, no unprinted edges appear. If you skip this, you risk unprofessional white lines ruining your design’s impact.

2. Watch Out for Margins and Safe Zones

Next, keep all critical text and logos at least 5mm inside the edge of your artwork – this is called the safe zone. On Canva, use guidelines to map these out. Anything sitting too close to the edge could go walkabout when the guillotine comes down.

3. RGB vs. CMYK: The Colour Question

A cardinal sin in print is sending artwork in RGB (light-based screen colours) instead of CMYK (ink-based print colours). Canva exports PDFs in RGB by default, which can cause a world of colour headaches, especially with bright blues and reds. While Canva doesn’t offer a true CMYK export, you can improve your results by:
– Keeping colours bold but not neon or overly saturated
– Setting your brand palette based on CMYK values, then manually matching colours as closely as possible within Canva
– Requesting a printed proof if accurate colour is mission-critical
For mission-critical colour jobs – think luxury brochures or tightly branded POS – talk to Print Lord directly. We can convert or fine-tune colours post-export for press-perfect accuracy.

4. Choose the Right File Format: PDF Print (Not PDF Standard)

When you’re ready to download, select PDF Print – this will output your design at 300dpi, which is suitable for most print jobs. Never use JPG or PNG for full-page printed pieces, as these are optimised for screens and social media, not paper.

5. Tick the Bleed and Crop Marks Boxes

On the download screen, Canva gives you two crucial options: ‘Show bleed’ and ‘Crop marks’.
– Tick both. Bleed tells the printer where the artwork should run off the edge. Crop marks act as the guide for where your finished design will be trimmed.
– If they’re missing, your print may end up with unsightly borders or incorrect sizing.

6. Check Image Quality and Fonts

Zoom in on your PDF at 400% before sending. Are all images sharp, text legible, and logos crisp? If anything looks fuzzy, replace those elements at a higher resolution. Canva can sometimes downscale images unexpectedly, so keep uploads as large as possible.

Font tip: Avoid using obscure fonts that might not embed correctly. Whenever possible, stick to well-supported, professional typefaces.

7. Double-Check Everything

Before you upload your masterpiece to Print Lord, do a quick review:
– Is the size correct, with bleed?
– Are colour choices close to your brand’s CMYK?
– Are all critical elements well within the safe zone?
– Is the file type PDF Print – with bleed and crop marks?
– Does everything appear sharp and accurate on screen at high zoom?

Got questions? Print Lord’s door is always open. One contact. One invoice. Zero risk. Because nothing leaves the castle unless it’s on brand and on time.

Bonus: When to Let the Pros Handle It

Some jobs are too important to risk a DIY file slip-up. If you’re handling a high-value print run – annual reports, commemorative brochures, or your once-in-five-years signage overhaul – let Print Lord set up the artwork, run the checks, and save your day.

We do not just print. We protect, we champion, and we deliver. On brand. On time.

The Print Lord Checklist: Canva to Press

  • – Start with correct size *plus* 3mm bleed
  • Keep live elements at least 5mm from the edge
  • Export as PDF Print (never JPG/PNG for main print work)
  • Tick bleed and crop marks before downloading
  • Double-check sharpness, colour, and layout
  • Ask for expert help when it matters most

With these steps, you’ll banish pixelated disasters and keep your print looking legendary. Trust your artwork to the right hands, and your materials will look every inch the king they deserve to be.

Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.

Cross-Selling at the Point of Sale: What to Print on Your Receipts

Learn how to use custom printed till rolls for effective cross-selling and upselling. Practical strategies for cafés, restaurants, retail, and service businesses from Print Lord’s expert guide.

Taxi and Private Hire: Branded Receipts for Professional Service

Custom printed till rolls for taxi and private hire services. Professional branded receipts with QR codes, booking details, and loyalty schemes. Expert advice from Print Lord.

St. Patrick’s Day Promotions: Timing Your Till Roll Campaigns

Event-based promotions work brilliantly when planned properly. Learn why your custom printed till rolls need to be ready before St. Patrick’s Day starts, not ordered the week before.

Customer Reviews Start at the Receipt: The Ask That Gets Results

Ask for reviews at the perfect moment with custom printed till rolls. Print Lord shows you how QR codes and smart receipt design drive more reviews, better visibility, and stronger customer trust.

Full Colour vs Single Colour: When to Invest in Premium Printing

Single colour or full colour custom printed till rolls? Print Lord explains when to invest in premium printing, covering cost, brand requirements, ROI factors, and industry expectations for EPOS thermal rolls.

Cafés and Coffee Shops: The Receipt That Brings Them Back Tomorrow

Custom printed till rolls turn every café receipt into a marketing tool. Learn how Print Lord helps coffee shops drive loyalty, reviews, and repeat visits.

Why Commodity Till Roll Suppliers Get It Wrong (And How Print Lord Gets It Right)

Most till roll suppliers know machines. Print Lord knows design, print, and marketing. Discover why expertise in both production and strategy delivers better branded receipts.

Seasonal Campaigns on Till Rolls: Planning Ahead for Maximum Impact

Plan seasonal till roll campaigns that drive results. Print Lord explains lead times, design repeats, and campaign coordination for custom printed thermal rolls.

Fashion Retail: When Your Receipt Needs to Match Your Brand Standards

Fashion brands invest in brand consistency across every touchpoint, except receipts. Print Lord explains why custom printed till rolls matter for premium presentation and how to get them right.

The ROI of Branded Receipts: Measuring What Matters

Learn how to measure the ROI of custom printed till rolls. Track QR code scans, redemption codes, reviews, and repeat purchases. Print Lord shows you what matters.