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Canvia Smart Digital Canvas Display and Frame - for Fine Painting, Wall Art, NFTs, Personal Photos & Videos - Advanced HD Display, NFT Compatibility, Video Playback, Google Photos, 16GB Storage

  • Based on 173 reviews
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Availability: Only 4 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Sunday, Jun 1
Order within 19 hours and 49 minutes
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Color: Cherry


Features

  • Curate Your Favorite Pieces - Easily create a playlist to stream your favorite pieces of artwork and schedule them to be displayed by the hour, day or week on the smart picture frame. Each digital frame purchase includes a free one-year subscription to our art library including over 10,000 paintings and photographs from contemporary artists and classic artworks digitally streamed from the worlds finest museums, Always free 500 artworks without a subscription
  • Add Your Own NFT Art, Photos, and Videos - Using the Canvia website or mobile app, you can integrate your crypto wallet and add purchased NFTs, view google photos, upload your own personal photos and videos, and showcase everything in your Canvia playlists. With 16 GB of memory, each Canvia frame can store hours of content!
  • Crystal Clear Advanced Fhd Screen - Displaying realistic images that appear to be paint or print, it has an advanced, full-HD screen with an anti-glare matte finish. The color-dynamic HD screen produces sharp images with vibrant colors that are true to the original artwork. It also senses darkness, entering a power-saving sleep mode and zoom and repositioning the image to highlight intricate details and overcome aspect ratio issue. Works with Alexa.
  • Blends With Any Decor - Available in four finishes, the Canvia digital picture frame is made with premium maple hardwood that seamlessly blends with any decor. The smart art frame can be positioned vertically or horizontally to accommodate a wide range of artworks. Vesa support.

Description

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Product Dimensions: 27 x 18 x 0.99 inches


Item Weight: 15.02 pounds


Item model number: CANVIA16GB


Date First Available: November 8, 2019


Manufacturer: Palacio Inc.


Country of Origin: USA


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Jun 1

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great idea & hardware, frustrating software
Color: Cherry
The Canvia is such a beautifully crafted object that it really pains me to return it, but it just doesn't work for me, and that's a shame. Materials and build quality are excellent and the display really is beautiful, holding up well in various lighting conditions. Unfortunately, the issues we had were sufficiently annoying that we eventually bought a Netgear Meural to replace it, and while it doesn't have every feature the Canvia does, it's nearly as nicely crafted, has some great extra features of its own, and everything it does works pretty much as you'd expect. Would that Canvia's software worked so well. [Before I go on (and oh how I will), a point of clarification - this is a non-Apple household, so all comments here are with respect to Web/Windows/Android. Some of these observations will likely continue to be relevant in the Appleverse, but YMMV when it comes to details.] Canvia's control functionality is scattered almost randomly across 3 different applications (web, smartphone app, Windows program), and to get all the functionality you can't ignore any of them. There are limitations that are just weird - if you try to load a playlist with more than a few dozen items, it takes an insanely long time (I canceled one 104-item transfer after around 45 minutes), so you're obliged to break up larger playlists into smaller ones so that the same total number of images can load into the frame much faster. Often while setting things up we found ourselves forced to switch between phone and web browser to complete the task. The whole process can be a bit glitchy, but in general most operations worked after some lag time or a retry (i.e., I don't recall "crashing" the frame and rebooting much). The Windows application is generally less important, but it does have some time-saving "bulk select" features that are frustratingly absent from the web app. I'm not going to rail on about every little thing here, but suffice it to say that the folks who signed off on the software were a lot less meticulous (or perhaps more overwhelmed) than the folks working on getting the hardware and cabinetry right (and again, those really are top notch). If you think you'll probably get the Canvia loaded with a stable collection and not fiddle with it a lot, this might matter less. Still, meriting special mention are two Canvia features distinguishing it from Netgear's Meural that are so dysfunctional that they cease to be advantages - the "Auto" image adjustment that's supposed to finely tune the displayed image to match the appearance of a canvas in current ambient lighting conditions, and the "pinch to zoom" function that lets you crop artworks in real time while displayed in the frame. Considering how big a deal Canvia makes of these features, it's amazing they've released them in this state. Regarding Auto-adjusting for ambient lighting, just forget it - it's completely broken, skewing color palettes wildly in response to only slight changes to the room's brightness and color spectrum. It seemed to toggle between an unnaturally green-gold tone and a completely surreal blue-green. It's awful, and is in fact so bad that Canvia just tells you to turn it off in the documentation, instead explaining the correct manual settings for specific lighting conditions and time of day. Excuse me? I'm supposed to open my phone app and manually re-tune my digital canvas image 3 times a day if I want it to look right? Obviously we ignored this and picked settings that looked pretty good most of the time, and even with Auto turned off the Canvia did at least adjust to brightness levels and could turn off the screen when the room was dark, a lot better resulting than letting Auto mode take the color palette into psychosis. Overall, for Canvia to promote this feature as a competitive advantage is a tasteless joke. I hope for their sake that this is addressed in a future software update. The zoom feature is a different beast - it sort of works much of the time, but for many pictures its flaws make it unusable, and for all images it's a lot more tedious than it should be. If you notice an image doesn't quite fill the frame as you'd like, you might expect from Canvia's promotional material that you can just take out your phone and adjust whatever's currently being displayed. Nope. Instead, you need to figure out what playlist is being shown, then locate the image of interest in that playlist, and THEN you can bring it up on your phone and zoom/crop it (in fairness, an advantage of this approach is that your changes are saved in the playlist whenever you bring it back) - and yes, when you do, you really can see it happening right on the frame's display (and you'll need to, since you only see part of the image on the phone). The more serious problem is that if you crop too close to the top of the picture (not the bottom, oddly enough) Canvia jumps all the way to the edge with no fine adjustment. In pictures where the composition would otherwise allow you to trim a little sky or treetops in order to save some details on the bottom, but cutting too much off the top is less desirable, Canvia's cropping behavior is just maddening. Our last set of issues were more a matter of taste, but also potentially more consequential, in that we found Canvia content less to our liking than Meural's. This is partly because Meural is more flexible in how you can put content onto the display, and partly how they've curated the content of their subscription services. First, the Canvia is just less useful than Meural without their subscription service. It does integrate a bit better with your Google Photos account, but if you have collected or created other digital artwork that you'd like to display, you'll have to load it into Google Photos or upload it to the Canvia cloud; by contrast, Meural allows you to transfer content directly from your phone or via memory card (a warning on Meural - the memory card feature is great, but the process is more technical than I think most people would prefer). Second, Canvia's subscription content is more limited and seems to have more of a "fine art" orientation than Meural's collection. Again, tastes will differ, but the more yours skew to calendar art and pop poster imagery, the less entertaining you'll find Canvia's selections. For our purposes, Netgear's Meural is far superior, but I didn't' want to just say "Canvia's bad, get a Meural", because comparisons I've read have been too vague about Canvia's disadvantages. I think it's a nice piece of hardware that's disadvantaged by half-baked software that's going to need some major attention if Canvia expects to survive. I wish them well, and if these issues really get addressed, I would consider a Canvia. They need to act quickly though - unfortunately for them, once you have a Meural and are looking to install a display elsewhere (Meural even offers a little desktop model), it's so much easier to manage your displays through a single app that adding a Canvia would be a pretty tough sell. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2022 by SB

  • Excellent hardware, very good customer support, confusing software overdue for a rewrite
Color: Black
May I have found the photographer's Holy Grail? Quite possibly. But first, I need to do some definition of may the Photographer's Holy Grail. One of the more common and slightly irksome question shared among photographers and asked to them is, 'So, what do you do with your photographs?' Today, everyone is a digital photographer if he or she has a smartphone or better camera. The images may or may not be improved in post processing but readily shared and forgotten over the Internet, albeit there are may photo share sites. But in the home, older surviving images continue to dominate among the displayed. My Holy Grail is discovering the newest iteration of electric photo frames that have moved way beyond their predecessors. During the past couple of weeks, I have played around with a very large (16" x 27" display) Canvia Smart Digital Art Frame - 16 GB Artwork Canvas) . So, how good is this expensive display? I leave the assessment with my most skeptical critic of 'my toys,' my wife. She absolutely loves it. Why? Rather than looking like a wall-mounted giant iPad, the images look like they have been printed and the illumination adjusts with ambient lighting levels. I can chose the rotation speed from seconds to days, but I prefer about 10 seconds. The image quality is very good. And my wife is even starting to reassess that maybe, just maybe, she married a skilled photographer. (Holy shutters, Batman!) In fact, we are thinking of buying a second Canvia Smart Digital Art Frame. We are just waiting to see if the rumor that they are developing a yet larger model and to consider if we with to pay the price. (It helps that the frame can handle 100v~240v, nice for those living outside of the US!) Having made the above rave review, this product is still very much a work in progress in terms of product marketing and software development. Apparently, the original notion was to allow buyers to upload free museum-quality works of art from a huge online inventory and display the same with the screen. Perhaps as a secondary thought, the developers realized that people may wish to put their own images into the frames as well. As a result, struggling with the software of this Wi-Fi device can be a bit exasperating among its three competing/complimenting platforms: smartphone, Internet website and desktop application. Which does what, or replicates, can be mystifying and other times its not clear if any of the options offer a solution for a need. The Help Desk is very responsive and very positive, however. But I often received received solutions, complete with screen shots from what looks like from older versions of the software. Also, the Help is not not as knowledgeable as one's first impression. But I don't blame the person on the other end of the email and phone conversations. The software, while ultimately it works well, is a mess in structure. It really needs to be rewritten for the purpose of general clean up and reorganization. For the photographer in mind, a separate software solution should be offered with a photographer's needed features, such as managing downloaded images and temporarily holding an image upon viewing before resuming auto rotation. For the user who wishes to display download art from the company's inventory, a very clean interface needs to be offered. Technically, I don't believe reworking this software is likely to be a huge task. But my impression is that this small company has created a number one rated product "tiger" and the staff is doing its best to hang on to the tiger's tail. I look forward to when the Canvia staff can fully ride that tiger! Overall, inspite of the above concerns, I strongly endorse this product. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2021 by tomcoyner

  • After setup challenges, beautiful product
Color: Black
The packaging for this frame contains a QR code for setup that has been discontinued/did not work anymore, which was not the best impression, but I was able to call the support phone line to start getting the app set up. Also disappointing was that although the frame itself is black, a white power cable was provided with it. As shown in the picture, the frame is beautifully vivid and bright. I’m looking forward to building out my photo playlist and making it a beautiful addition to my family room. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2022 by S Rangell

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