Artikel: 9 Art Prints vs. AllPosters, INPRNT, Juniqe, Minted and Great Big Canvas: The Decision
9 Art Prints vs. AllPosters, INPRNT, Juniqe, Minted and Great Big Canvas: The Decision
This article is part of our Guide to Buying Fine Art Prints

The Matterhorn - Hiroshi Yoshida
When you buy an art print online, you are not just buying an image. You are buying a physical object that has to hold up under light, distance, time, and scrutiny. The paper matters. The ink matters. The print process matters. And the degree of technical specificity a company is willing to give you usually tells you a great deal about the product itself.
That is why comparison shopping in this category can be misleading. Many online print shops use strong language—premium, museum-quality, archival, gallery-quality—but they are not all describing the same thing, and they are not all equally precise about the materials behind those words.
So here is the real decision: not simply which site has the image you want, but which site tells you exactly what kind of object will arrive at your door.
The 9 Art Prints Standard
At 9 Art Prints, the standard is explicit. Product pages specify Hahnemühle German Etching 310 gsm paper and a 12-ink archival giclée process. Hahnemühle describes German Etching as a mould-made fine art inkjet paper with a distinct textured surface and a premium matte coating intended for FineArt reproduction.
Specified Paper
This is where the difference begins. We do not say “premium matte.” We do not say “museum-quality paper” and leave it there. We tell you the actual substrate: Hahnemühle German Etching. Once the paper is named, its properties can be independently checked.
Defined Weight
The paper weight is also stated clearly: 310 gsm. Again, that matters because it removes ambiguity. A named fine art paper at a stated weight is a more precise promise than a generic material claim.
The Giclée Process
Our process is also stated clearly: a 12-ink archival giclée process. That matters most on art that depends on tonal subtlety, atmospheric gradation, and surface character. Once those specifications are public, the standard is public too.
Archival Materials
The point is not that other companies never use good materials. Several do. The point is that the terms are not always standardized in the same way across their catalogues, and not every company is equally exact about the stock, weight, or print system being used.
The Precision Stress Test: Yoshida & Albers
Certain works reveal reproduction limits immediately.
A Hiroshi Yoshida print will expose whether a printer can preserve subtle gradations, atmospheric depth, and quiet colour without flattening the image. A Josef Albers composition will expose whether colour relationships remain properly separated or begin to collapse into one another. These are not theoretical issues. They are exactly the kind of issues that paper surface, inkset, and print precision affect.
That is why material specificity matters more than decorative language. You are not only asking whether a shop sells prints. You are asking what kind of print it is actually making.

Tiger Lily - Inspired by Josef Albers's Homage to the Square
The Comparison: At a Glance
| Brand | What it publicly specifies | What stands out |
|---|---|---|
| 9 Art Prints | Hahnemühle German Etching 310 gsm; 12-ink archival giclée process | Named paper, stated weight, stated process |
| INPRNT | 100% cotton rag, acid-free paper; 300 gsm; 10-color printing system; archival-rated paper and ink | Strong technical specificity for its in-house art prints |
| Juniqe | Regular posters on UV-resistant 250g premium HP poster paper; regular posters use an 8-color system; Hahnemühle option available with 12-color printing | More specific than many décor-first retailers, especially on its poster and Hahnemühle options |
| Minted | Premium Art Prints on museum-quality cotton rag archival paper with archival pigment ink; Standard Art Prints on acid- and lignin-free matte art paper with deluxe pigment ink | Clear distinction between premium and standard print tiers |
| Great Big Canvas | Paper prints are giclée printed with archival inks; framed art uses UV-resistant archival latex inks on premium fine art paper | Strong print-method language, but less paper-specific than a named fine art stock |
| AllPosters | High-quality materials and professional printing techniques; collection pages describe museum-quality giclée, archival inks, and premium archival paper on some product lines | Large selection and multiple print types, but less standardized material disclosure at the brand level |
What the Competitor Language Actually Tells You
INPRNT is one of the stronger comparisons in this group because it is unusually direct about its print specs. Its help documentation says it makes prints in-house on museum-quality, 100% cotton rag, acid-free paper at 300 gsm, using a 10-color printing system, with archival-rated paper and ink.
Juniqe is also more transparent than many mass-market décor retailers. Its help pages state that regular posters use UV-resistant 250g premium HP poster paper and an 8-color printing system, while its Hahnemühle option uses a 12-color system. That is useful information because it distinguishes between a standard poster tier and a more premium fine art tier.
Minted separates its materials by tier as well. Its Premium Art Prints are described as museum-quality cotton rag archival paper with archival pigment ink, while its Standard Art Prints use acid- and lignin-free matte art paper with deluxe pigment ink. That kind of distinction is valuable because it tells the buyer that not every print format on the site is the same object.
Great Big Canvas clearly states that its paper prints are giclée printed with archival inks, and its framed art pages describe UV-resistant archival latex inks on premium fine art paper. That is credible, useful language. But it is still different from specifying a named paper stock like Hahnemühle German Etching.
AllPosters offers a very large range of posters, art prints, framed pieces, and giclée products. It does use strong materials language in various collection and product pages—archival paper, archival inks, museum-quality giclée—but the exact paper stock and weight are not presented as a single standardized house specification in the way a fine art specialist would typically do.
Arriving at a Decision
Each of these companies serves a different kind of customer.
If what you want is broad selection and a wide range of decorative options, AllPosters and Great Big Canvas make sense. If you want artist-platform discovery with stronger print language, INPRNT is a serious option. If you want independent artists with distinct premium and standard tiers, Minted is well structured. If you want a décor-oriented marketplace that is relatively transparent about poster and Hahnemühle options, Juniqe is better than many generic wall-art retailers.
But if your priority is a print whose material standard is declared plainly—named paper, stated weight, and stated process—then the field narrows fast.
That is the difference at 9 Art Prints. We are not asking you to trust a mood. We are telling you what the print is: Hahnemühle German Etching 310 gsm, produced with a 12-ink archival giclée process.
Once the paper is named, the promise is measurable.
References
- 9 Art Prints product page: https://9artprints.com/products/starry-night-van-gogh
- Hahnemühle German Etching product page: https://www.hahnemuehle.com/en/digital-papers/hahnemuehle-photo/p/Product/show/37/13.html
- INPRNT help page, “What kind of paper and ink do you use?”: https://help.inprnt.com/article/62-what-kind-of-paper-and-ink-do-you-use
- JUNIQE help page, “Posters”: https://support.juniqe.com/hc/en-150/articles/13016414118417-Posters
- JUNIQE help page, “What paper or finishes can I choose for my poster?”: https://support.juniqe.com/hc/en-150/articles/38913512370705-What-paper-or-finishes-can-I-choose-for-my-poster
- Minted product page showing Premium and Standard Art Paper details: https://www.minted.com/product/wall-art-prints/MIN-NUA-GNA/stacks-2
- Great Big Canvas paper print page: https://www.greatbigcanvas.com/view/masterpiece%2C3000884/?product=13
- Great Big Canvas company page: https://www.greatbigcanvas.com/about-us/our-company/
- AllPosters homepage: https://www.allposters.com/
- AllPosters Decorative Art collection page: https://www.allposters.com/-st/Decorative-Art-Posters_c1152_.htm
- AllPosters Museum Quality Framed Giclee Prints page: https://www.allposters.com/-st/Museum-Quality-Prints-Framed-Giclee-Prints_c133494_t273661_.htm
