Skip to main content

8×10 app lets you sell your Instagrams as framed fine art in a few finger taps

8x10

Instagram’s photo-focus tends to drive artists to the social network and one startup is working to help artists make some cash by selling those Instagrams as fine art prints. 8×10 is a new iOS app that aims to help artists and photographers sell their work on Instagram, eliminating the need to build a separate online store.

8×10 manages the sales, printing and shipping process, leaving the artist to just create the work and set up the sale inside the app in order to start selling prints. The app allows Instagrammers to sell their images as framed prints in limited-edition runs, creating a link for followers to order the piece.

Inside the app, artists upload a high-resolution image used for the print and the Instagram post. The app walks artists through the different options for setting a price, terms, and hashtags along with titling the work. Once finished, the app sends that information to the Instagram app, where the artist finishes crafting the post using the information pre-generated from the app. 8×10 can also create a graphic showing the image inside a frame to post, or users can simply share the actual image being printed.

8x10

The app also allows artists to sign the work using the touchscreen to add a signature, or by uploading a signature file or a graphic to use as a stamp instead of a signature. The limited-edition prints are also numbered. Images are printed on cotton fine-art paper with archival ink, 8×10 says.

Followers on Instagram will see the image, captions, and hashtags, along with a link to order the print.

Launched by the same people behind Recently, the app that creates a magazine from an iPhone’s camera roll, Scott and Elizabeth Valins wanted to create a platform to help artists monetize their work. The duo launched the company on April 12.

“What’s been transformative for artists like ourselves, is how Instagram has enabled us to reach a global audience that we couldn’t have reached otherwise. However, it is a complicated path between having a following and being able to sell and fulfill art purchases,” Scott Valins, said in a statement. “I cannot tell you how many astoundingly talented peers of ours consistently turn down requests from their fans because the process of fulfilling archival art is too complicated, too time-consuming, and cost prohibitive.”

8×10 isn’t the first platform to try to allow artists to sell Instagrams, but existing options like Twenty20 focus on selling the graphics as stock images, not fine art prints.

The 8×10 iOS app is free to download — the company earns their revenue by taking a portion of the image sale, a cut that is listed as artists set the price of the print in the app. The app is now available from the App Store.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
How to remove location data from your iPhone photos
How to transfer photos from an iPhone to an iPhone

We all love making memories, and a great way to collect those memories is to take a quick snap of a gorgeous landscape, a party in full swing, or a particularly incredible meal. The Apple iPhone now also adds a location to your pictures, meaning it can collate those images together into a location-themed album, or show you all the shots you've taken in a specific location. It's a fun little addition, and it's one that adds a lot of personality to the Photos app.

Read more
‘Photoshopped’ royal photo causes a stir
The Princess of Wales with her children.

[UPDATE: In a message posted on social media on Monday morning, Princess Kate said that she herself edited the image, and apologized for the fuss that the picture had caused. “Like many amateur photographers, I do occasionally experiment with editing," she wrote, adding, "I wanted to express my apologies for any confusion the family photograph we shared yesterday caused."]

Major press agencies have pulled a photo of the U.K.’s Princess of Wales and her children amid concerns that it has been digitally manipulated.

Read more
Nikon sale: Get up to $700 off select Nikon cameras and lenses
nikon d780 review product  1

Crutchfield has a huge sale on many different Nikon cameras with some of the best camera deals that we’ve seen in a while. With nearly 30 different items in the sale, the best thing that avid photographers can do is take a look for themselves. However, if you want a little insight before you dive in, take a look at what we have to suggest below.

What to shop for in the Nikon sale
Nikon makes some of the best DSLR cameras around with our overall favorite -- the -- available for $2,197 reduced from $2,297. The camera is perfect for both photographers and videographers with a 24.5-megapixel full-frame image sensor. Its rugged magnesium-alloy body is weather-sealed against dust, dirt, and moisture so it’s great for all occasions. The Nikon EXPEED 6 image processor is optimized for low-light performance while maintaining long battery life with an autofocus sensor module with support for 51 focus points. You just need to add a lens to reap the benefits with features like the 273-point phase-detection AF system detecting and tracking subjects throughout the entire frame.

Read more