Reposition: put your image on a custom-sized canvas
Puts your image on a new canvas at the exact size you want — perfect for hitting size requirements on print-on-demand sites and Etsy.
The Reposition tool takes whatever the previous step gave it and puts it on a fresh, custom-sized canvas. It lets you set the exact width, height, and print quality you want. This is the step that makes your output ready to upload.
Why this step matters
Different websites want different image sizes.
- Amazon Merch shirts want 4500 by 5400 pixels
- Etsy listing images want at least 2000 by 2000 pixels
- Printful and Printify want different sizes depending on the product
- Upload the wrong size and the site will either reject the image or squish it
Reposition makes sure every image in your batch comes out at the exact size you want, no matter what the original looked like.
The six settings
When you add Reposition to your pipeline, you'll see these controls:
The new canvas is always transparent (see-through). If you want a solid color behind your image, add a Frames step earlier in the pipeline.
DPI in plain English
DPI is a number that tells a printer how sharp to make the final print. It does not change the size of your image.
- 72 DPI is fine for anything going on the web or social media
- 300 DPI is what print-on-demand sites want because it prints sharper
- A 4500 by 5400 image at 72 DPI has the exact same pixels as a 4500 by 5400 image at 300 DPI — the printer just treats them differently
Use 300 for anything that will be printed on something physical. Use 72 for anything going online.
Common sizes people use
Type these into Canvas Width and Canvas Height. Make sure Unit is set to px (pixels).
For Printful, Printify, Redbubble, or TeePublic — go check the product's template page on their website. Every product has its own recommended size. Copy the numbers into Canvas Width and Canvas Height.
Tips
- Put Reposition near the end of your pipeline. Remove the background first (with Color Removal). Cut off the empty edges (with Trim). Then put the clean result on your target canvas with Reposition. Doing this in a different order leaves your image small and off-center on a big empty canvas.
- Save the whole pipeline as a preset. Once you've set up "Merch 4500x5400" or "Etsy 2000 square," click Save Current Preset. Next time, one click loads the whole pipeline — no retyping dimensions.
- Use Padding if the site crops your image. Some print-on-demand sites cut a few pixels off each edge during upload. A padding of 50 to 100 pixels keeps your design safely inside.
- Center is almost always right. H-Align: C and V-Align: C work for most product images and designs.
Things Reposition doesn't do
- It doesn't make your image bigger or sharper. Reposition just places your image on a bigger canvas — it leaves the image itself alone. If you need the image to fill the whole canvas, use the Resize tool earlier in your pipeline.
- It doesn't give you a colored background. The canvas is always transparent. If you need a color or pattern behind your image, use the Frames tool earlier in the pipeline.
- It has no built-in platform presets. You have to type the numbers in yourself. But you can save your own pipeline as a preset so you never have to type them twice.
What to read next
- Color Removal — typically the first step before Reposition
- Trim — typically run between Color Removal and Reposition to remove empty edges
- Amazon Merch bulk prep — full POD workflow built around Reposition
- Etsy design prep — Etsy listings workflow
- Presets — save your Reposition settings so you don't retype dimensions every time