
Your phone is full of perfectly good park photos doing absolutely nothing. Park Poster Studio gives them a reason to leave the camera roll and find a frame.
A WPA-style poster reads like a brushed silkscreen: limited palette, painterly cutouts, and an unwavering belief in the dignity of public lands. Applied to Grand Teton, the result leans into Cascade Canyon without turning it into a generic souvenir.
The export is a high-resolution PNG embedded with 300 DPI metadata, sized to print cleanly at standard 12×16 or 18×24 frame dimensions.
A WPA-style poster traditionally limits itself to four or five flat colors and treats the photograph as a posterized illustration rather than a literal image.
There's no signup, no watermark on the preview, and no time limit — design as long as you want before deciding to download.
Drag a landscape, summit, or trailhead shot from your camera roll into the studio.
Three poster styles — WPA, retro, modern — each with a different mood and layout.
Park name, dates, trail name, coordinates, fonts, color palette — live preview.
High-resolution PNG, 300 DPI, sized for standard frames you can find anywhere.
Original national park prints, vintage WPA-inspired designs, and limited print runs live in my Etsy shop, alongside the custom commission queue for elopements, anniversaries, and first-summit gifts.
Visit the Etsy shopNo — the style is a typographic and color treatment, not a fixed park. Use the same look for any photo you upload, from any trip. The studio reshapes the palette around your image automatically.
It is inspired by original WPA national park posters and mid-century travel artwork from the 1930s-1950s — the same posters that hung in ranger stations and railway depots. The fonts, palettes, and layouts evoke the era of vintage national park prints while staying yours to print.
Yes. Templates are non-destructive — switching templates re-applies type, palette, and layout while keeping your photo, park name, and edits intact. Try a few against your trip photo before you commit.
Not at all. The studio handles palette extraction, type sizing, and band proportions for you. You only adjust the few details that matter — park name, dates, a trail or peak, and a couple of color knobs.