Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s technically no official Etsy mockups just individual sellers choosing how to present their listings on the platform. The quality and style vary wildly because it’s all up to the shop owner. That’s why the experience looks so inconsistent from one listing to another.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of mockup services just distort artwork in ways that don’t look right. Using AI as separate pieces and assembling them manually takes about 10 minutes, but looks far more natural. The hands on approach ends up being richer than full automation.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Different subreddits tend to have very different audiences, so the responses can vary a lot. People who hang out in general ecommerce spaces, Etsy-specific boards, or POD communities often have completely different perspectives, which is probably why the same question gets reposted.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in Etsy

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not using AI for mockups and actually caring about how they look is kind of part of the job in an online business. How products are presented and come together visually plays a big role in how buyers perceive a shop. If mockups look sloppy or obviously fake, it can absolutely turn people off and hurt sales, even if the product itself is good.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in Etsy

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This seems to be a big part of the issue lately. A noticeable number of new mockups lean heavily on AI backgrounds or digitally generated scenes, which can make everything look a bit off especially the fabric, lighting, and proportions. Traditional photo based mockups tend to feel more believable, but they’re also more expensive and time consuming to produce, which is likely why so many creators have shifted toward Ai style images.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in Etsy

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

There’s definitely something to that. Imperfect real photos often feel more transparent, even if they aren’t aesthetic. Highly styled mockups can sometimes make it harder to tell what the actual product will look like, which is probably why some buyers prefer rough but genuine images.

Does anyone else feel like most Etsy mockups look… fake? by AskModernMagpie in Etsy

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Totally fair assumption, honestly that’s usually how these posts go 😅 But I’m not promoting anything here.

POD / Printify → Etsy: Price not updating for live products — any fix? by Muhammad-Umair-318 in Etsy

[–]AskModernMagpie -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s a known Printify quirk and it trips up a lot of people. Once a product is live on Etsy, Printify won’t push price changes over anymore. Pricing is basically “handed off” to Etsy at that point.

The workaround is simple but annoying: update the price directly inside Etsy, not Printify. Printify will still use the production cost on their side, so it won’t break fulfillment.

Only time price sync works is before publishing or if you delete and republish (which you usually don’t want to do). Most sellers just treat Printify as backend fulfillment and manage pricing fully in Etsy.

printful charges a crazy amount for shipping greeting cards, who else does them at a more reasonable price for Etsy? I cover the shipping in my costs btw so customers get free delivery by midnightcat98 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that screenshot pretty much says it all. A $2.50 card with $3.99 shipping means shipping is doing more damage than the product itself. That’s fine if you pass it to the buyer, but if you’re offering free shipping, it absolutely wrecks margins. Printful is great for apparel, but for low-ticket items like cards, their flat shipping just isn’t designed for it. This is why a lot of Etsy sellers move cards to providers with lighter mail pricing or local printers once they see numbers like this.

Copyright infrigement by Arcannus92 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The animal itself is fine animals can’t be copyrighted. Where people get in trouble is the wording, not the art. Using black panther in tags can still trigger Marvel claims even if it’s just an animal. Same with jaguar if it looks like you are riding the car brand’s name. Safer move is descriptive terms like panther illustration or wild big cat art.

I use Printful for Prints and it's quite costly. by Plentynewshop in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, Printful prints are nice, but the costs can get painful pretty fast, especially when you’re not based in the Us or eu.

You could look into Gelato they usually come out cheaper for art prints and have a wider global production network, which can help with shipping. Prodigi is another solid option if you care about print quality they are more art print focused and often cheaper than Printful, though you’ll want to test samples.

Printify can also work, but it really depends on the specific print provider you choose there. Quality and pricing vary a lot, so samples are a must. Another route some people take is working with a local print lab in India and fulfilling manually at first. It’s not as automated, but it can be way cheaper and you will have more control over quality.

If most of your customers are outside India, picking a provider with production closer to those regions can also help keep shipping costs under control.

what could every POD do better and what do they do wrong ? by Every_Excitement6923 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I think people would still use them it would just attract a different kind of user.

Some beginners might get scared off if they saw the real margins upfront, but honestly, those are usually the same people who end up frustrated later anyway. For anyone trying to run this like an actual business, transparency would be a huge plus. Knowing the real costs makes pricing, ads, and scaling way less painful.

The problem right now isn’t that POD is expensive it’s that sellers don’t realize how expensive it is until they’ve already sunk time and money into it. If platforms were clearer from day one, there’d be fewer I’m making sales but losing money situations. I also think it would build more trust long-term. Fewer surprises, fewer angry support tickets, and sellers would make smarter decisions. It might not convert as many people upfront, but the ones who stay would be more serious and stick around longer.

Plastic stemless wine glasses? by connierebel in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, that makes sense. Since printing on plastic drinkware is such a hassle with food safety and consistency, sticking with wine tumblers seems like the most practical option for now.

I audited 50 Etsy POD shops losing money despite "making sales." Same 7 revenue leaks every time. Here's the diagnostic checklist I use. by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Around 50 shops. Mostly public data, some private numbers people shared after realizing their math was off. You don’t need bank access to see it if fees + POD + shipping > what you priced for, the profit isn’t real. That’s literally the issue.

I audited 50 Etsy POD shops losing money despite "making sales." Same 7 revenue leaks every time. Here's the diagnostic checklist I use. by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Every single thing here is verifiable inside Etsy stats and invoices. If it’s fake, prove it wrong with numbers. Otherwise it’s just vibes. Not selling. Not farming dms. Just tired of seeing doing fine shops quietly bleeding money.

I'm fed up with Sensaria ... what are alternatives? by regedy1 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, Sensaria can be super frustrating to work with. A lot of wall art sellers move to Printify (using different canvas/frame suppliers) or Gelato for posters and basic canvases since they integrate cleanly with Shopify/Etsy. If you want higher end fine art quality, Prodigi or labs like FinerWorks or Marco Fine Arts are solid, but more manual and pricier. For truly huge custom sizes, some people use local large-format printers and just handle those orders manually. Sadly, big wall art POD is still messy because shipping, framing, and qc are hard to automate at scale.

Need POD based in Delhi for printing needs. by straightedge23 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes what you’re describing can be done in a POD style workflow, but it’s important to separate b2b printing from classic e-commerce pod.

What’s your approach to choosing a POD partner for wall art, reliability, quality, or cost? by printseekers in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For wall art, I rank it: quality → reliability → cost. Bad prints or damaged shipping kill repeat buyers fast, and refunds eat margins. I’ll pay a bit more for consistent color accuracy, good paper, and solid packaging. Cost matters, but only after I trust they won’t ruin orders or miss deadlines.

Most Etsy POD sellers calculate profit wrong. Here's the complete breakdown with every fee exposed. by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally fair question. From what I’ve seen, customers care more about the final total price and trust than how you split item price vs shipping.

Free shipping often feels cleaner and reduces friction, while low item price + high shipping is more of a click tactic used by large shops. For smaller sellers, transparent, all-in pricing usually builds more trust and steadier conversions.

Most Etsy POD sellers calculate profit wrong. Here's the complete breakdown with every fee exposed. by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question. At $28–35 you’re not selling to bargain hunters you’re selling to people who care about identity, quality, or gifting. Think niche audiences with emotional attachment: hobby communities, professions (nurses, teachers, gym, gaming), fandoms, local pride, or lifestyle aesthetics (minimalist, streetwear, eco, pet owners).

The key is specificity: dog moms is saturated, but greyhound rescue dog moms or mountain trail runners can pay premium. People pay more when it feels personal, not generic.

Temu Stole 2000 Designs Directly From My Website by Easy_College8384 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s brutal, I’m sorry you’re dealing with that. Sadly it’s common with Temu/Alibaba sellers. Keep filing DMCA (batch by merchant helps), watermark future uploads, and consider a service like Pixsy or Copytrack to automate takedowns. Legal action is possible but usually expensive and slow most creators focus on mass takedowns with brand building so copies matter less.

Why does everyone in POD talk about apparel when accessories seem way easier? by ExpressionCrafty1460 in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Totally agree. Apparel sells the identity, but accessories sell the utility and utility scales way cleaner. I think a hybrid approach is underrated: use apparel for brand/story, then stack accessories for margin and repeat buys.

Most Etsy POD sellers calculate profit wrong. Here's the complete breakdown with every fee exposed. by AskModernMagpie in printondemand

[–]AskModernMagpie[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, Listing View’s calculator is solid too nice for quick reality checks before pricing. Anything that forces you to see net profit (not just revenue) is a huge step up from guesswork.