You’ve ordered a canvas print before. It arrived in a box. You hung it on the wall. It looked… fine.
But have you ever taken a close look at the edges? Run your hand across the surface? Noticed a slight wave or a corner that doesn’t sit quite flat against the wall?
That’s the difference between machine-stretched and hand-stretched canvas.
At Art On Anything, every single canvas that leaves our workshop is stretched by hand. Not by a machine. Not by a mass-production line in another country. By an artisan with over 5 years of experience.
Why does that matter? Let me show you.
The Problem: What Happens When Canvas Isn’t Stretched Properly
A canvas print is fabric stretched over a wooden frame. Sounds simple. But if it’s done poorly, you get problems that can’t be fixed later.
| Problem | What It Looks Like | Can It Be Fixed? |
|---|---|---|
| Waves or ripples | The surface isn’t flat. Light catches the bumps. | No – you have to re-stretch the entire canvas |
| Loose corners | The fabric pulls away from the frame | No – the canvas will continue to sag over time |
| Uneven tension | One side is tight, the other is loose | No – it will never hang straight |
| Crooked grain | The canvas weave runs diagonally instead of straight | No – the image will look misaligned |
| Staples visible on the side | Ugly metal staples on the face of the artwork | No – you can’t un-staple without damaging the canvas |
Mass-produced canvas prints are often stretched by machines. The machine pulls the fabric, fires staples, and moves to the next one. There’s no human checking for waves or loose corners.
We do it differently.
Our Process: How Art On Anything Stretches a Canvas
Every canvas that leaves our workshop goes through the same 7-step process. No shortcuts. No automation.
Step 1: Print with Epson HD Inks
We print your image onto high-quality cotton-poly canvas using Epson professional HD inks. These inks are:
- Fade-resistant (archival quality, 50+ years)
- Vibrant (wide colour gamut)
- Water-resistant (won’t run if a drop of water lands on the canvas)
Why this matters: A great stretch starts with a great print. If the ink is cheap, the colours will fade. If the canvas is low quality, it won’t hold tension.
Step 2: Cut the Canvas with Generous Overhang
We cut the printed canvas with at least 5cm of extra fabric on each side. This overhang is what we pull and stretch. Without it, we can’t get proper tension.
Why this matters: Cheap printers cut the canvas exactly to size. They can’t apply real tension because there’s nothing to pull.
Step 3: Build a 30mm Chunky Pine Frame
We don’t use thin 20mm frames like mass-produced prints. Every one of our frames is:
- 30mm thick (50% thicker than standard)
- Solid pine wood (not MDF or particle board)
- Braced for large sizes (cross-supports for A1, A0, and Titan sizes)
Why this matters: A thin frame will warp over time. A thick, solid frame stays straight forever.
Step 4: Hand-Position the Canvas on the Frame
We lay the frame face-down on the back of the printed canvas. Then we align:
- The image so it’s perfectly centred
- The canvas weave so the grain runs straight
- The corners so the image wraps evenly on all sides
Why this matters: Machine-stretching often results in crooked images. We check every alignment by eye before we pull a single staple.
Step 5: Pull and Staple – One Side at a Time
This is where the skill comes in.
We start with the longest side. We pull the canvas tight – not too tight (which distorts the image), not too loose (which creates waves). We staple the centre, then work outward toward the corners.
Then we rotate and repeat on the opposite side.
Why this matters: Machines pull with the same force every time. But every canvas is different. A human hand can feel the tension and adjust.
Step 6: Fold and Tuck the Corners
The corners are the hardest part. If you just fold the canvas over, you get a bulky, messy lump.
We use a technique called “hospital corners” (the same method used to make beds in hotels). The fabric is folded, tucked, and stapled so the corner is:
- Flat (no bulky bunching)
- Tight (no loose flap)
- Clean (no visible wrinkles)
Why this matters: The corner is the first thing people notice when they look at the side of a canvas. A messy corner says “cheap.”
Step 7: Final Inspection
We hold the canvas at eye level and check:
- No waves or ripples across the surface
- All corners are tight and clean
- All staples are flush (no sharp edges)
- The image is perfectly centred
If anything is wrong, we don’t ship it. We start over.
Why this matters: You should never receive a canvas that you’re unhappy with.
Hand-Stretched vs. Machine-Stretched: The Side-by-Side
| Machine-Stretched | Hand-Stretched (Art On Anything) | |
|---|---|---|
| Frame thickness | 20mm (standard) | 30mm (chunky, premium) |
| Tension | Uniform but often loose | Variable, adjusted by feel |
| Corners | Bunchy, messy | Clean, folded, tucked |
| Staple visibility | Often visible on the side | Hidden on the back |
| Waves or ripples | Common on large sizes | None – we re-do if we see them |
| Human inspection | Rare (mass production) | Every single canvas |
| Made in | Usually imported | Pretoria, South Africa |
Real Examples from Our Workshop
A customer who noticed the difference:
“I bought a canvas from a large online store last year. It was cheap, but it arrived with wrinkles in the corners. I thought that was normal. Then I ordered an A2 from Art On Anything. The difference is night and day. The corners are perfect. The surface is completely flat. I didn’t know a canvas could look this good.”
— Michelle, Centurion
What we hear most often:
“I didn’t know canvas was supposed to feel this solid.”
That’s the 30mm frame. You can feel the difference as soon as you pick it up.
Why Mass-Produced Canvas Prints Cut Corners
You might be wondering: if hand-stretching is better, why doesn’t everyone do it?
Time.
A machine can stretch a canvas in 30 seconds. A human takes 5–10 minutes per canvas, depending on the size.
When you’re making 10,000 canvases a day, automation is the only way. The result is a lower price – but also lower quality.
We’re not making 10,000 canvases a day. We’re making 10–20 high-quality canvases. Each one gets the same attention, whether it’s an A4 gift or an A0 statement piece.
How to Spot a Poorly Stretched Canvas (Before You Buy)
If you’re shopping around, here’s what to look for:
| What to check | What’s good | What’s bad |
|---|---|---|
| Run your hand across the surface | Completely flat | Waves or ripples |
| Look at the corners from the side | Clean folds, no bunching | Bulky, messy fabric |
| Check the staples | Hidden on the back | Visible on the side |
| Lift the canvas | Feels solid, heavy | Feels light, cheap |
| Look at the image alignment | Perfectly centred | Crooked or off-centre |
If you see any of the “bad” signs, put it back. It was machine-stretched.
What About Floating Frames?
We also offer floater frames for our canvases. A floater frame is a wooden frame that sits slightly away from the canvas, creating a “floating” shadow line.
Floater frames work best with hand-stretched canvases because:
- The canvas needs to be perfectly flat (any waves will be visible)
- The corners need to be clean (they’re fully visible)
- The frame depth needs to match (our 30mm frames fit standard floater profiles)
If you’re interested in a floater frame for your canvas, just ask. We’ll show you options.
Ready to See the Difference?
The best way to understand hand-stretched quality is to see it in person. Visit our workshop in Pretoria. We’ll show you:
- Side-by-side comparison (good stretch vs. bad stretch)
- Our 30mm chunky pine frames
- The folding technique we use on corners
No pressure. No hard sell. Just craftsmanship you can see and feel.
WhatsApp us at +27 64 504 6275 to book a visit.
Or order online. Every canvas we ship is hand-stretched by the same artisan. No exceptions.
Final Verdict: Why Hand-Stretching Matters
| If you buy machine-stretched… | If you buy hand-stretched from us… |
|---|---|
| You might get waves or ripples | The surface is perfectly flat |
| Corners will be messy and bunched | Corners are clean, folded, and tucked |
| The frame will be thin (20mm) | The frame is chunky (30mm pine) |
| Staples might be visible | Staples are hidden on the back |
| No one inspected your canvas | Every canvas is inspected by hand |
| It was made in a factory overseas | It was made in Pretoria, by hand |
You get what you pay for. A cheap canvas looks cheap. A hand-stretched canvas looks like art.
Art On Anything – Art That Speaks
*Hand-stretched in Pretoria. 30mm chunky wood. Ready to hang.*