
Xofineart
Xofineart sells limited-edition giclée prints, original canvases, and hand-embellished works, all produced in small numbered runs. Prices sit in the mid-to-premium band: open-edition prints start around $120, while originals and embellished pieces climb to $1,800. Sales are online-only through xofineart.com, with global DHL shipping and optional white-glove framing.
The brand collaborates exclusively with emerging international painters, photographers, and digital artists, turning each design into museum-grade archival prints on 320-gsm cotton rag. Every edition is strictly capped (25–100 copies), accompanied by a signed certificate and NFC chip for provenance. Their “Artist Proof” series—hand-finished by the creator with acrylic or gold leaf—has sold out in minutes and appears on secondary markets at 2-3× issue price.
Buyers are 25-45-year-old design-conscious professionals who rent or own urban lofts and want statement art without gallery mark-ups. They value scarcity, direct artist support, and the ability to match frame finishes to mid-century or minimalist décor; Instagram and Pinterest drive most discovery.
Xofineart competes with mass-produced wall-art marketplaces on one side and brick-and-mortar contemporary galleries on the other. It undercuts gallery retail margins by 40-50 % while offering tighter edition controls and archival quality than décor print sites, positioning itself as a curated digital gallery for investment-grade yet accessible contemporary art.
Museum-quality art from emerging artists, minus the gallery markup and the gatekeeping
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Tableauxdumonde
Tableauxdumonde sells limited-edition archival pigment prints and original works on paper sourced from contemporary artists worldwide. Prices run roughly $150–$1,200 for prints and $800–$6,000 for originals, placing the offer in the accessible-to-mid-premium segment. Sales are handled exclusively through the e-commerce site, with global flat-rate shipping and optional white-glove framing.
The brand’s edge is its rotating, curator-dropped model: new themed collections of 6–12 works launch every 4–6 weeks and are retired once the edition sells out, creating scarcity without auction-house complexity. Each piece ships with a numbered certificate, blockchain provenance record, and an exhibition backgrounder written by the in-house curatorial team. Best-known drops include the “Urban Solitude” and “Neo-Figurative” series, both of which sold out within 48 hours.
Core buyers are design-conscious professionals aged 25–45 who rent or own urban apartments and want statement art without gallery intimidation. They value transparent artist royalties (60 % to creator), sustainable FSC-certified papers, and the ability to trade pieces on Tableauxdumonde’s secondary-market portal.
Competitors include online print marketplaces, brick-and-mortar contemporary galleries, and artist-direct platforms. Tableauxdumonde differentiates by combining rapid-drop scarcity, museum-grade production, integrated resale liquidity, and lower price entry points than galleries, while offering stronger curation and provenance guarantees than open print-on-demand sites.
Curated art drops that sell out fast, trade forever
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Urban Road
Urban Road is an Australian online-only wall-art specialist whose catalogue spans ready-to-hang canvas prints, framed prints, floating frames, and limited-edition originals, with a growing line of linen cushions, throws, and home décor accents. Most pieces fall between AUD 199 and AUD 699, placing the brand in the accessible-to-mid range; oversized statement works and hand-embellished editions can reach AUD 1,200. Everything is sold exclusively through urbanroad.com, shipped factory-direct from their Brisbane studio.
The company differentiates itself by owning the entire workflow: every image is shot or painted in-house by their collective of photographers and artists, colour-matched to gallery-grade giclée standards, and stretched on kiln-dried pine frames made in their own carpentry shop. Limited runs are numbered and registered, and the site releases new collections monthly to keep the range fresh; best-sellers include the muted “Australian Native” botanical series and the expansive aerial “Coastal” prints.
Core buyers are 28-45-year-old design-conscious homeowners and renters updating inner-city apartments or new builds, plus interior stylists sourcing statement pieces for client projects. They value turnkey styling, neutral contemporary palettes, and the assurance that the art is locally created, not mass-imported.
Urban Road competes with global print-on-demand marketplaces and domestic homeware chains that sell cheaper wall art, but counters with Australian-made quality, tighter edition controls, and faster domestic shipping. Against higher-end galleries they remain more affordable while still offering museum-grade inks and custom sizing, positioning themselves as the middle-ground curator of “original-feel” art without gallery mark-ups.
Australian-made wall art that actually feels original, without the gallery price tag
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EleanosGallery
EleanosGallery.com is a strictly e-commerce storefront that ships worldwide, offering mid-range to premium wall art: ready-to-hang canvas and framed prints, limited-edition giclées, and occasional originals, with sizes from 8×10 in. up to oversized 60×40 in. pieces priced USD $60-$1,200. The catalogue is organized into color-coordinated collections—abstract, coastal, botanical, urban skyline, and figurative—updated monthly to keep roughly 1,200 SKUs in rotation.
The brand’s edge is museum-grade reproduction: every image is color-proofed against the original painting, printed with Epson UltraChrome HDR on 400 gsm cotton canvas, stretched over kiln-dried pine, and finished with a UV-blocking satin varnish that carries a 75-year no-fade warranty. A design tool on the site lets shoppers preview art in four room settings and four wall colors, and each limited run is numbered and accompanied by a blockchain certificate of authenticity—features that have made their “Coastal Neutrals” and “Abstract Ochre” series best-sellers on Pinterest and Instagram.
Core buyers are 28-45-year-old North American and European professionals—interior enthusiasts who rent or own modern condos and want signature artwork without gallery mark-ups. They value turnkey style, fast fulfillment (48-hour dispatch), and the ability to refresh décor seasonally; sustainability is also key, so the brand offsets shipping carbon and uses FSC-certified wood, aligning with eco-conscious lifestyles.
EleanosGallery competes in the crowded online wall-art space against print-on-demand marketplaces and budget décor retailers. It distances itself through higher production standards, limited-run exclusivity, and a tightly curated aesthetic that mimics interior-design showroom catalogs, allowing customers to achieve a designer look without the traditional gallery price premium or lead time.
Museum-quality art that refreshes your space without the gallery price tag
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Modernartisans
Modernartisans is a strictly e-commerce marketplace that aggregates American craft studios, listing 3,000-plus SKUs across jewelry, home décor, kitchen & dining accessories, garden art, and personal accessories. Price architecture runs from $18 enamel pins and $32 hand-thrown mugs to $1,200 forged-steel dining tables, anchoring the catalog in the mid-range ($50-$300) with a visible premium tier for statement furniture and limited-edition sculpture. All transactions occur through the brand’s own Shopify site; no brick-and-mortar or third-party marketplace presence is maintained.
The company curates only U.S.-based makers who produce in small batches, guaranteeing that every item is handmade-to-order and shipped directly from the artisan’s studio, a policy that eliminates inventory risk and keeps designs exclusive. Signature collections include recycled-aluminum outdoor sculpture from Maine, copper kinetic wind spinners from Arizona, and food-safe pottery lines that have been featured in Food Network shoots. Each product page links to the maker’s biography and shop policies, reinforcing transparency and provenance.
Core buyers are design-conscious homeowners aged 30-55 who value ethical sourcing, want to avoid mass-market retail aesthetics, and are willing to wait 1-3 weeks for custom craftsmanship. The brand also attracts gift-givers seeking narrative-rich items with artisan-signed certificates and eco-friendly packaging that aligns with their sustainability ethos.
Modernartisans competes with curated craft marketplaces, artisan collectives, and boutique lifestyle retailers that aggregate handmade goods. It differentiates by limiting its roster to U.S. makers, enforcing strict handmade-to-order fulfillment, and offering unified customer service, returns, and carbon-neutral shipping—benefits smaller platforms rarely bundle and larger craft marketplaces dilute through overseas mass-produced listings.
Handcrafted by real American makers, shipped straight from their studios
- Sustainable
- Recycled
- Handmade
- Ethical
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Artme
Artme.co.uk is an online-only retailer specialising in affordable art prints, framed wall art and small-run artist collaborations. The catalogue spans ready-to-hang canvas, paper and framed prints priced £15-£120, placing the brand squarely in the budget-to-mid-range segment. Limited-edition drops and print-on-demand fulfilment keep inventory lean while offering hundreds of designs at any one time.
The company’s USP is fast access to trend-driven, copyright-cleared artwork produced in its own UK studio, enabling new releases every week. Best-known collections include the minimalist Line Art series and colour-block Coastal sets, both stocked in six standard sizes with optional sustainable wood frames. Every piece is printed with pigment inks on 280 gsm fine-art paper and dispatched within 48 hours.
Core buyers are 25-40 year-old renters and first-time homeowners who refresh décor often but avoid high-gallery prices. The brand speaks to Instagram-savvy consumers who value quick, affordable aesthetic updates and like supporting emerging artists through revenue-share editions.
Artme competes with mass-market print marketplaces and high-street home retailers by keeping prices low while retaining a curated, gallery-lite feel. It differentiates through British production, consistent sizing for gallery walls and a rotating artist programme that keeps imagery fresher than generic stock-art competitors.
Gallery-quality art that refreshes weekly, never your budget
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Gajethouse
Gajethouse sells design-forward home décor and small furniture—think planters, side tables, lighting, textiles, and decorative objects—priced in the mid-range bracket, typically USD 40-250. The line is released in limited-edition drops and is sold exclusively through its own e-commerce site, shipping worldwide from U.S. and EU fulfillment points.
The brand’s hook is a sculptural, slightly surreal aesthetic that mixes matte ceramics, polished metals, and soft curves; many pieces double as art objects (e.g., the “Gajet Vase” that morphs into a side table). All SKUs are designed in-house, produced in small runs of 100-300 units, and individually numbered, creating collectability and rapid sell-outs announced to an e-mail wait-list.
Customers are 25-40-year-old urban creatives—designers, architects, content creators—who treat apartments like galleries and value originality over mass-market trends. They buy Gajethouse to signal taste and to own “future vintage” pieces that photograph well and gain resale value on secondary design marketplaces.
Gajethouse competes with direct-to-consumer décor brands that chase fast-trend SKUs at similar price points; it differentiates by prioritizing form over function, keeping quantities scarce, and using museum-grade packaging that reinforces art-object positioning rather than utilitarian homeware.
Collectible art objects that happen to hold your coffee table
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Matchboxcityprints
Matchboxcityprints sells limited-edition, map-based wall art that turns city street grids into abstract geometric prints. The catalog is split between small “matchbox” format pieces (≈ $25-$45) and larger framed or canvas statement works (≈ $120-$220), placing the brand in the accessible-to-mid range. Sales are online-only through the house site and Etsy storefront; every print is made-to-order in the company’s Brooklyn studio.
Designs are generated from open-source GIS data, silk-screened or giclée-printed on archival paper, and individually numbered in micro-runs of 50-150. The brand’s signature is its minimalist, single-ink palette that lets roads, rivers and parks become the only visual elements—no place names, no legends—so buyers recognize their city by shape alone. Custom coordinates, wedding-date maps and metallic-ink variants form the best-known capsule collections.
Core customers are 25-45-year-old urban professionals who have moved between cities and want a compact piece of “home” that fits modern, pared-back décor. The appeal is nostalgic but design-driven: the prints signal local pride without sports-team clichés and slide easily into gallery walls or rental apartments where drilling for oversized art is discouraged.
They compete with mass-market map posters and high-end custom cartographic art houses. Against big-box prints they offer true small-batch scarcity and designer colorways; against bespoke cartographers they undercut price and turnaround while retaining hand-pulled screen-print texture and numbering that proves authenticity.
Your city, abstracted into art that actually belongs on your wall
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