
Print on demand (POD) is one of the highest-leverage use cases for AI image generation: no inventory, no capital, and every design you produce can be listed on a dozen platforms simultaneously. But the stores that actually earn follow a discipline most beginners skip.
Each POD platform has its own product economics and audience:
Pick one, study its top sellers, and reverse-engineer what sells before generating anything.
Platforms expect 300 DPI at full print size. For a standard 12"×18" poster that's 3600×5400 pixels. Most AI outputs default to 1024–2048px, which will be rejected or print badly. Your workflow needs an upscaling step — Topaz Gigapixel, the platform's built-in upscaler, or a model with native high-res output.
The same concept needs different layouts per surface:
Never list a design with only the raw art file. Buyers convert on mockups. Placeit, Smartmockups, and built-in platform mockups are all fine — what matters is showing your design on a person, a wall, or a desk. Budget 10 minutes per listing for mockup generation.
Generic "cool cat poster" loses. "Mid-century modern cat portrait for designers" wins. Pick a niche with enough depth to support 50+ designs and enough audience to buy them.
POD platforms are aggressive about IP takedowns. A single violation can zero out your store's history.
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