
Simple question really...
Have they had their day, or is it a case of Togs charging far too much for them??
I think they are a commodity item and so people will be not be willing to pay as much for them.
As always, people will say 'I could get a canvas from vistaprint for £40, why are you charging XX'
or perhaps too many £9.99 deals on Groupon - and thats what folks they they should pay...?
If you can get an item of the quality you desire for price £X, why pay more?
It doesn't require insurance (i.e. like a warranty on a car, you might go for a make with better aftersales).
Personally, I am very happy with the canvases I have purchased at their full retail cost of £20
I have only just had them a year admittedly, but apart from the fact they collect dust, I can see no discernible difference to the day they were bought.
Trouble is, my walls are now saturated. Probably won't buy another for at least 6 months-1 year, possibly not until I move house.
The £10 deals will help to saturate the market.
I think that over-priced canvases have had their day. Now 'everyone' has a camera, and can get canvases made at 'reasonable' (to me £20 for ~A2 is) cost, it will be difficult in most circumstances to justify attempting to charge £80.
cw318is said:I think the thing with canvasses is that you could get an alright photo printed on them and it would still look quite good. The texture and its wall presence hides things like sharpness.
So, Mr Man takes a snap on his p&s, pays his £20 to snapmad or wherever and thinks to himself well this looks great, now why would I want to pay a professional £xxx for the same?
If you can get an item of the quality you desire for price £X, why pay more?
It doesn't require insurance (i.e. like a warranty on a car, you might go for a make with better aftersales).
Personally, I am very happy with the canvases I have purchased at their full retail cost of £20
I have only just had them a year admittedly, but apart from the fact they collect dust, I can see no discernible difference to the day they were bought.
Trouble is, my walls are now saturated. Probably won't buy another for at least 6 months-1 year, possibly not until I move house.
The £10 deals will help to saturate the market.
I think that over-priced canvases have had their day. Now 'everyone' has a camera, and can get canvases made at 'reasonable' (to me £20 for ~A2 is) cost, it will be difficult in most circumstances to justify attempting to charge £80.
Hi,
New here and this is my first post.
I run my own large format print business catering for canvases aswell as paper prints and digital wallpaper.
With regards to canvas prints. Yes the market is saturated no doubt. However, there is a massive difference in quality that reflects in the price. You can get canvases dirt cheap £20 or the like for an A2, but you can rest assured that the type of canvas, inks, wood used are poor quality.
I use the Canon IPF8000 with Lucia Inks, 415gsm 100% cotton canvas and properly bevelled kiln dried redwood. So my prices are not the cheapest, but you get decent quality.
Its like most things i suppose, you can buy crap or pay more for quality. Unfortunately most people are unaware of the different levels of quality that make up a canvas, so they see a cheap price and think it will be just as good as something twice as much.
drubber77 said:Hi,
New here and this is my first post.
I run my own large format print business catering for canvases aswell as paper prints and digital wallpaper.
With regards to canvas prints. Yes the market is saturated no doubt. However, there is a massive difference in quality that reflects in the price. You can get canvases dirt cheap £20 or the like for an A2, but you can rest assured that the type of canvas, inks, wood used are poor quality.
I use the Canon IPF8000 with Lucia Inks, 415gsm 100% cotton canvas and properly bevelled kiln dried redwood. So my prices are not the cheapest, but you get decent quality.
Its like most things i suppose, you can buy crap or pay more for quality. Unfortunately most people are unaware of the different levels of quality that make up a canvas, so they see a cheap price and think it will be just as good as something twice as much.
there is also a massive difference in what a client thinks too. the canvases I've made for myself use cheap stretcher bars, eBay cotton canvas and printed using my R2400. they have been on the wall for years with no cracking, rippling or fade.
I see no reason to pay more for the same product.
having tried a significant amount of canvases ( I used to talk at camera clubs about papers etc ) I am yet to see any difference from my cheap canvas compared to the likes of hahnemuhle, Epson or innova. you may well see a difference when you look under a lupe but nothing at normal viewing distance.
yes buy a product that is of good quality but that does not mean lots of money to get it.