Gallery Mat Photo Print — Photo Products template (2953×3543)

Photo Products

Gallery Mat Photo Print

Format Portrait Size 2953×3543 mm DPI 300 Color CMYK

A fine-art gallery print starter — a generous mat border and a museum-style caption plaque turn a flat photo into a considered framed piece.

  • 250×300mm portrait, CMYK, 300dpi, 3mm bleed
  • Deep asymmetric mat border with a hairline keyline frame
  • Museum-label caption plaque — title, medium line, edition

Made with AI

Model: Generated via Popcorn Editor

“Design a fine-art gallery photo print, 250×300mm portrait. The idea: the mat border isn't packaging around the photo — the border IS the design decision, echoing how a real fine-art print lab or museum presents a photograph as an object. Declare 3 process swatches reused verbatim from the sibling photo-products/photo-books.json file for palette continuity: 'ink' cmyk[0,0,0,92], 'paper' cmyk[0,0,0,0] (pure white), 'ember' cmyk[0,62,78,4]. Use a real placeholder photo: templates/shared/placeholder-portrait.jpg (warm golden-hour portrait — fine-art register). Layout: the photo inset with roughly equal ~30mm side and top margins, but a deliberately DEEPER ~60mm bottom margin reserved for the caption; a thin (~0.75pt) 'ink' hairline keyline floating a few mm OUTSIDE the photo's edge (never touching it — the classic float-mount line, a stroke-only rect with no fill); below that, a museum-label caption plaque: an 'ember' accent rule (~34mm wide, 1.5pt — mirror the exact rule spec used in photo-books.json's own accent line), a short evocative ITALIC Playfair Display title (invented — a plausible one/two-word fine-art title, never a real photographer or place name), and a small tracked-caps Inter line reading 'FINE ART PIGMENT PRINT · EDITION 1 OF 25' (invented, generic — never a real edition size claim tied to a real artist). One committed idea — no second accent color, no icon, no decorative flourish; the deep mat proportion and the hairline keyline ARE the boldness. Named Fabric groups + a specific human-readable name on every element.”