Chronicles by Print Lord

File Type Matters: Why PDF Print (Not PNG, Not JPG) Is the Only Right Answer

Apr 21, 2026

Close-up of modern printing machine in a professional studio environment.

File Type Matters: Why PDF Print (Not PNG, Not JPG) Is the Only Right Answer

Print Lord has received thousands of files over the years, and we can tell you with absolute certainty that file type is where a shocking number of print projects fall apart. Not because people don’t care, but because they simply don’t know that clicking the wrong export option in Canva can torpedo weeks of careful design work.

This isn’t about being fussy. This is about the fundamental difference between a file that prints properly and one that causes problems, delays, and disappointing results. If you take one thing away from this entire April campaign, make it this: PDF Print is the only correct file format for professional print. Not PNG. Not JPG. PDF Print, always.

Let’s explain why, and what goes wrong when you get it wrong.

Why PDF Print Is the Professional Standard

PDF stands for Portable Document Format, and it was designed specifically to preserve the exact appearance of a document regardless of what software, hardware, or operating system opens it. That matters enormously in print, where precision is everything.

When you export a design as PDF Print from Canva, you’re creating a file that includes:

Vector information: Text and shapes stay crisp at any size, no pixelation.

Embedded fonts: Your chosen typefaces travel with the file, so they display and print exactly as intended.

High resolution images: Photos and graphics maintain their quality at 300dpi (the print standard).

Bleed and crop marks: The technical elements printers need to produce your job accurately.

Accurate colour information: CMYK data that translates properly to physical ink on paper.

Exact dimensions: The file knows precisely what size it’s supposed to be, down to the millimetre.

A PDF Print file is a complete, professional package that any commercial printer can work with confidently. It’s the industry standard for a reason: it works.

What Goes Wrong with PNG Exports

PNG files are brilliant for web graphics, social media images, and screen display. For print, they’re a disaster waiting to happen.

Here’s why:

Resolution problems: PNG exports from Canva are typically 72dpi or 96dpi, designed for screens. Print needs 300dpi. The result? Blurry, pixelated print that looks amateur no matter how good your design was.

No bleed: PNG files don’t include bleed. They stop exactly at the design edge, which means when the printer trims your job, you’ll get white edges or cut-off elements. We covered bleed earlier this month, and this is exactly why it matters.

Flattened content: Everything in a PNG is converted to pixels. Text that was sharp and crisp in your design becomes a rasterised image that can look fuzzy, especially at smaller sizes.

Colour shifts: PNG files use RGB colour (red, green, blue), which is perfect for screens but gets converted to CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) for print. That conversion can cause unexpected colour changes, and you won’t know about them until you see the printed result.

File size issues: To get anywhere near acceptable print quality, PNG files become enormous, making them awkward to send and slow to process.

Print Lord has seen countless PNG files arrive with the hopeful instruction “please print this”. We can work with them, but we’ll need to warn you about quality issues, and often the job needs to be redesigned properly. All of that could be avoided by exporting as PDF Print in the first place.

What Goes Wrong with JPG Exports

JPG files are even worse for print than PNG, because they add another layer of problems.

Lossy compression: Every time a JPG is saved, it loses quality. The compression algorithm throws away data to make the file smaller, which means your images degrade. Fine for a quick photo share, terrible for professional print.

Compression artifacts: JPG compression creates visible blocky patterns, especially around text and sharp edges. You might not notice them on screen, but they’ll be glaringly obvious in print.

Same resolution problems as PNG: JPG exports from Canva are screen resolution, not print resolution. Blurry results guaranteed.

No bleed, no crop marks: Just like PNG, JPG files don’t include the technical elements printers need.

RGB colour mode: Same colour conversion issues as PNG, with the added joy of compression artifacts making colour consistency even worse.

If PNG is a poor choice for print, JPG is actively damaging to your design quality. Print Lord will always ask you for a better file if you send a JPG, because we’ve seen too many disappointed clients who approved a JPG on screen and then hated the printed result.

How to Select PDF Print in Canva

The good news is that exporting correctly from Canva is straightforward once you know where to look.

Here’s the process:

1. Finish your design and make sure you’re happy with it. Check bleed, check margins, check image quality (we covered all of this earlier in April).

2. Click the Share button in the top right corner of Canva.

3. Select Download from the menu.

4. Click the file type dropdown (it probably says PNG by default).

5. Choose PDF Print from the list. Not “PDF Standard”, which is for digital documents. PDF Print specifically.

6. Tick the boxes for crop marks and bleed (we’ll cover export settings in detail tomorrow, but these are important).

7. Click Download and save the file somewhere sensible with a clear filename.

That’s it. You’ve now got a professional, print-ready file that any printer can work with confidently.

The Print Lord Perspective: What We See When Files Arrive

Print Lord checks every file that comes through the door, and we can spot a PNG or JPG export within seconds. The signs are obvious to experienced eyes: soft edges on text, visible pixelation in solid colour areas, missing bleed, incorrect dimensions.

When we see those signs, we have a choice. We can print it anyway and deliver a substandard result, or we can contact you and ask for a proper file. We always choose the second option, because we’re not in the business of taking your money for print you’ll be disappointed with.

But here’s the thing: that back-and-forth costs time. If you’re working to a deadline, requesting a new file can be stressful. If we’re working to a production schedule, it can cause delays. And if the deadline is genuinely immovable, you might end up with compromised quality because there’s no time to fix it properly.

All of that disappears when you export as PDF Print from the start. The file arrives, we check it, it’s spot on, it goes straight into production. No delays, no compromises, no stress. That’s how print should work.

When Someone Tells You PNG Is Fine

Occasionally, someone will tell you that PNG is perfectly acceptable for print, or that their mate printed a PNG once and it was fine. Here’s the truth: it might have been fine for a specific, limited use case (maybe a large format poster where viewing distance hides the quality issues), but it’s not fine as a general rule.

Professional printers prefer PDF Print files because they’re reliable, complete, and designed for the job. If a printer tells you PNG is acceptable, they might be being flexible to win your business, but they’re not giving you the best possible result.

Print Lord’s position is simple: we want you to get the best possible print from your design work. That means PDF Print files, every time. We’re not being difficult. We’re being professional.

The Bottom Line: PDF Print, Always

If you remember nothing else from this week’s posts about exporting for print, remember this:

PDF Print is the only correct file format for professional print work.

Not PNG. Not JPG. Not PDF Standard. PDF Print specifically, with bleed and crop marks included.

This isn’t optional or negotiable. It’s the difference between print that looks as good as your design and print that lets you down. It’s the difference between a smooth production process and frustrating delays. It’s the difference between professional results and amateur compromises.

Canva makes it easy to export correctly. There’s no technical barrier, no extra cost, no complicated process. Just choose the right option from the dropdown menu, and you’re done.

Print Lord is always here to check your files and catch any issues before they become problems, but we’d much rather receive a perfect PDF Print file that sails through production than have to ask you to export again. Get this one thing right, and you’re already ahead of a huge number of people who send print files.

Tomorrow, we’ll walk through all the export settings you need to tick in Canva to make sure your PDF Print file is genuinely print-ready. But today, just commit this to memory: PDF Print, always.

Ready to Get Your Print Files Right?

If you’re planning a print project and want to make sure your files are spot on before they go to production, that’s exactly what Print Lord is here for. We’ll check your work, catch anything that needs fixing, and make sure you get print that’s on brand and on time.

Get in touch with Print Lord and let’s make sure your next print project is done properly from the start.

Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.
printlord.co.uk

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