There’s nothing quite like the feeling of finally finishing your artwork in Canva, the deadline looming, the client (or your own boss) breathing down your neck, and that little surge of relief as you get ready to send your file to print. But before you do, Print Lord urges you to pause. One final check can make the difference between a print masterpiece and costly disappointment.
Print Lord has seen it all: funky margins, colours off, blurry logos, and crops that would bring tears to a typesetter’s eyes. Decades at the coalface of print have taught us that file prep isn’t just technical, it’s the secret to looking like a hero, not an amateur. Here’s the top five crucial things to check in Canva, every single time, to ensure your print is crowned, not condemned.
- 1. **Size and Bleed: No Room for Error**
Before you do anything else, double-check your artwork dimensions and ensure you’ve added bleed. If your finished leaflet needs to be 210mm x 99mm (that’s one-third A4, for those fond of trivia), your Canva canvas must match, plus at least 3mm of bleed on all sides. Bleed means any background colour or photo extends beyond the trim line, so when the guillotine comes down, you’re left with a flawless edge, not a wonky white border.
To set bleed in Canva: On desktop, click File > Show print bleed. If you see white edges after that, expand your backgrounds or images outward until they fill the grey bleed zone. Simple. Forgotten bleed is the number-one culprit of ruined print… and embarrassment.
- 2. **Resolution: Crisp, Not Crap**
It’s not enough for your design to look sharp on screen, it needs to sing in print. Canva operates at 96 DPI by default (that’s dots per inch), but commercial print demands 300 DPI minimum for every graphic and logo. Anything lower, and you’ll get blurry, fuzzy images that look unprofessional.
Before sending, zoom in to 100% or more and see if everything still looks crisp. And if you’ve imported logos, check they’re either vector (SVG, PDF) or high-res PNG/JPG, never pull random web images into your masterpiece.
- 3. **Colour: RGB vs CMYK, The Print Lord’s Crusade**
Let’s set the record straight: computer screens run on RGB (red, green, blue), but printing presses use CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black). Artwork prepped in RGB may look brilliant on your Mac, but could lose vibrancy, depth, or even unpredictably shift in print.
Canva Pro lets you switch your file to CMYK for download (PDF Print). If you’re not on Pro, be wary that the colours you see on screen might not be the exact hues on the finished job. When in doubt, ask Print Lord to proof and advise, we spot trouble before it costs you.
- 4. **Fonts: Embed or Beware**
Print Lord has a soft spot for a great font, but nothing strikes fear like a wobbly line break or a missing character. Always use Canva’s font library or confirm that any uploaded font is properly licensed.
When downloading your PDF for print, choose “Flatten” and “Embed Fonts” if available. That way, your headings won’t switch to Comic Sans in the hands of a wayward courier. Alignment matters, double-check every text box for stray spaces, orphan words, and tidy margins. It’s the sign of a true professional.
- 5. **Safe Zone: Guard Your Details**
The ‘safe zone’ is your moat. Keep all vital content (logos, addresses, CTAs) at least 3-5mm inside the trimmed edge. Cropping happens, and if your contact details are right on the border, the guillotine may snip them clean off. Canva’s margin guides make it easy, if not, draw temporary rectangles to help visualise. Anything important hugging the edge is asking for a demotion.
The Print Lord’s Final Word
You might think this sounds pedantic… until the day you save the day with a perfect print. File prep is the invisible crown on every project, clients rarely realise it’s there, but they’ll spot immediately when you miss it.
Need a final eye? Print Lord is always at your service to double-check, advise, and spot anything that could get you in trouble. Professional results, less drama.
Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.