Prints and Reproductions Ship Differently Than Original Paintings
This guide is about prints, posters, photographs, and paper-based reproductions — the flat, often reproducible art that print shops, photographers, and Etsy sellers move by the hundreds. That's a genuinely different shipping problem from an original oil on stretched canvas, which is heavy, three-dimensional, and irreplaceable. If you're shipping an original painting or a stretched canvas, our paintings and canvas art guide covers glassine, stretcher-bar bracing, impasto, and custom crating in depth. Here, the enemy is different: creasing, curling, corner dings, and moisture, not frame cracks and puncture.
Because most prints are on paper, your two format choices — rolled in a tube or shipped flat between rigid boards — drive every other decision. Get that choice right for the size and medium and the rest of the packing follows naturally. Get it wrong (rolling a print that shouldn't be rolled, or shipping a large poster flat where it will inevitably bend) and you're inviting exactly the damage the format was supposed to prevent.
ℹ️ Shipping an original painting, stretched canvas, or a heavy framed piece instead of a paper print? See /how-to-ship/paintings — the packing, insurance, and crating rules for original fine art are meaningfully different from prints and reproductions.
Rolled in a Tube: When and How
Rolling is the print seller's default for anything roughly 16 inches and larger, and for good reason: a tube is rigid, compact, cheap to ship, and nearly impossible to bend. The technique matters, though. Use a tube with a generous diameter — wider is better, because a tight roll builds 'curl memory' that leaves the print wanting to re-roll itself on the buyer's wall. Interleave the print with a sheet of acid-free tissue or glassine so the printed surface never rubs against itself or the tube wall, roll loosely, and slide it into the tube with room to spare.
The failure mode for tubes isn't bending — it's crushed ends and prints that slide out. Cap both ends securely and tape over the caps, because a popped cap in transit means a lost print. For premium or limited-edition prints, a plastic sleeve around the rolled print adds moisture protection inside the tube. And skip the 'DO NOT BEND' stamp on a tube — it's rigid by design; your handling instruction there is 'FRAGILE' if anything. In our label maker, select the Tube package type so dimensions and rate calculate correctly.
- Tube diameter: go wider than feels necessary — 3-inch minimum, 4-inch+ for large or heavy-stock prints to reduce curl memory.
- Interleave with acid-free tissue or glassine so the printed face never contacts the tube or itself.
- Roll loosely, cap both ends, and tape the caps down — popped caps are the #1 tube failure.
- Don't roll: thick watercolor paper, photo prints prone to cracking, mounted/matted pieces, or anything with heavy ink build — ship those flat.
Flat Prints, Matted and Mounted: Rigidity Is the Whole Job
Smaller prints, photographs, and anything matted, mounted, or on stock too stiff to roll ship flat — and here rigidity is everything. The proven method is a sandwich: the print in a clear cello sleeve or glassine folder, placed between two pieces of rigid backing board or foam board cut slightly larger than the print, taped into a unit so nothing shifts, then into a stiff photo/print mailer. Corner and edge dings are the most common flat-print damage, so the boards need to overhang the print enough to take the hit the artwork otherwise would.
This is the workflow that print-on-demand and Etsy print sellers run at volume, so build it for repeatability: pre-cut backing boards to your standard sizes, keep rigid mailers in two or three dimensions on hand, and standardize a sleeve-plus-board-plus-mailer kit. Mark 'DO NOT BEND' on both faces of a flat mailer — unlike on a tube, it's a meaningful instruction — and add a moisture barrier if the route or season is humid. For heavier framed prints under glass, jump to the framed section below.
💡 For a print business, cost control lives in standardization: a fixed set of print sizes maps to a fixed set of tubes, boards, and mailers, which makes both packing time and postage predictable. Non-standard sizes are where margin quietly leaks — every odd dimension is a custom pack.
Framed Prints, Editions, and Insuring Reproductions
A framed print introduces glass, which is the main thing that breaks. For reproductions you actually intend to ship, acrylic (plexiglass) glazing is the smart choice — it's far lighter and won't shatter, turning a fragile shipment into a routine one. If the frame already has real glass, tape an X across it with painter's tape so shards stay put if it cracks, cover the glazing with a cardboard face, wrap the frame with corner protection, and box with padding all around; for valuable framed pieces, consider removing the glazing and shipping it separately.
Insurance logic for prints differs from originals precisely because prints are reproducible. An open-edition poster is worth its replacement cost — cheap to reprint and reship, so heavy insurance rarely makes sense. A signed, numbered limited edition is a different animal: its value is the edition and the artist's signature, not the paper, so insure it at its market price and include the certificate of authenticity, protected separately, since a limited-edition print without its COA loses much of what makes it collectible. Declare value honestly and keep proof of the sale price for any claim.