2026 Complete Guide

How to Print Game & Movie Covers at Home

Everything a collector needs to make professional-looking cover prints — from sourcing the right artwork at the right resolution, to choosing paper, configuring your printer, cutting clean folds, and laminating for shelf-ready durability.

In this guide
  1. Why Print Custom Covers?
  2. Where to Find High-Quality Cover Art
  3. Scanning Your Own Covers
  4. Step-by-Step: Using CoverStitch
  5. Printing Best Practices
  6. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  7. Frequently Asked Questions

Why Print Custom Covers?

Anyone who has spent time hunting for older games or movies knows that the case is often in worse shape than the disc. Sun-faded inserts, water-stained back covers, ex-rental stickers that took the artwork off when peeled, and missing covers entirely on loose-disc copies are part of the territory. Reprinting the cover is the cheapest, fastest way to restore a case to display quality without the cost (or scarcity) of a sealed replacement copy. A four-cent sheet of photo paper and ten minutes of your time can rescue a £40 game from looking like junk on the shelf.

The second reason is curatorial. Collectors who buy loose-disc copies — common with PS1, PS2, GameCube, and DVD-format movies — usually want a presentable case. Printing the original retail cover is the obvious move, but custom collections go further: matching back-covers for digital-only Switch games so they line up alongside physical ones, alternate "what if" art, region variants (Japanese boxart on a US-region case), or full custom box sets for ROM hacks, fan translations, and indie titles that never got a physical release. None of that is possible without a tool to combine front, back, and spine into one print-ready file at the correct dimensions.

The third reason is the satisfying part: a complete shelf. Anyone who has stared at their collection long enough has noticed how much one mismatched or damaged spine throws off a row of cases. Reprinting one cover so the spine title aligns with the rest of the row — or so a faded yellow PS1 spine matches its neighbours — is a small thing that changes how the whole shelf reads. For a hobby that's largely about visual presentation, that consistency matters more than the cost of the paper.

Where to Find High-Quality Cover Art

The single biggest factor in print quality is the source image. A blurry 800-pixel-wide JPG will produce a blurry print no matter how good your printer is, because no amount of upscaling adds detail that wasn't captured in the first place. The goal is to find a scan at 300 DPI or higher — for a standard PS2 cover, that's roughly 3235 × 2173 pixels for the full wrap. Here are the sources collectors actually use:

Resolution Check Before downloading, look at the file dimensions. A full PS2 wrap should be around 3200 × 2100 pixels or larger. Anything significantly smaller will print soft or pixelated. If you're stuck with low-res source art, run it through an AI upscaler like Upscayl (free, open-source) or Topaz Photo AI before stitching — these add real detail rather than just stretching the pixels.

Scanning Your Own Covers

If you own the original case and the cover is in good shape, scanning it yourself produces the highest-quality result possible — better than most online uploads, because no one else has compressed the file or rescaled it. The tradeoff is that scanning takes ten minutes per cover and requires either a flatbed scanner or a careful phone setup.

Flatbed scanning (recommended)

Set your scanner to 600 DPI in colour mode and scan the front and back panels separately. (Trying to scan the unfolded full wrap usually exceeds the scanner bed.) Most flatbed scans come out slightly skewed — straighten them in any image editor (Photoshop, GIMP, Photopea, or even Preview on Mac) using a "rotate by angle" tool. Crop tight to the printed area and save as PNG to avoid JPEG compression artifacts. 600 DPI is overkill for actually printing, but it gives you headroom to crop and clean up without losing detail. CoverStitch will downsample to the correct print resolution automatically when you select a preset.

Phone scanning (when you don't have a flatbed)

Lay the unfolded cover flat on a clean, evenly-lit surface — a table near a window in indirect daylight is ideal. Avoid direct sunlight (creates harsh shadows) and overhead room lights (cause uneven brightness). Hold the phone parallel to the cover and shoot from directly above. Apps like Adobe Scan, Microsoft Lens, or Apple Notes' built-in scanner automatically de-skew and crop the result, which is much faster than doing it manually. Phone scans are noisier than flatbed scans but acceptable for most prints.

Post-processing

Once you have a clean scan, the main fixes are: white-balance correction (paper should look neutral white, not yellow or blue), spot removal for any dust or scuff marks, and a light sharpen pass. Don't aggressively colour-correct — printer drivers will shift colours anyway, and over-saturated source files end up looking wrong on paper. If you're scanning a faded or damaged cover, a single curves adjustment to lift midtones is usually enough.

Step-by-Step: Using CoverStitch

Once you have your front, back, and (optionally) spine images, CoverStitch combines them into a single print-ready file. Everything runs in your browser — your images are never uploaded to a server, and there's no signup. Here's the flow:

1

Choose a Case Preset

Select PS2, PS5, Switch, DVD, Blu-ray, or Steelbook. The preset sets the exact pixel dimensions at 300 DPI for that case format.

2

Upload Your Images

Drop your back cover, spine (optional), and front cover into the upload zones. JPG, PNG, and WebP all work.

3

Click Stitch

Each panel is resized to the preset dimensions and combined side-by-side: back, spine, front — the standard wrap order.

4

Download

Save as PNG (lossless, recommended) or JPG. The filename pre-fills from your front cover name for easy organisation.

Single mode vs. Batch mode

Single mode is the default — one cover at a time, full preview, fast. Use it for one-off prints. Batch mode is for collectors restoring a whole shelf: drop dozens of images into a pool, drag them visually into Back/Spine/Front slots for each cover, then stitch all of them at once and download the lot. The batch interface is built specifically for the workflow of "I have a folder of 50 cover scans, I want to turn them into 20 finished wraps."

Custom dimensions

If your case is non-standard — an oversized Steelbook, a digipak, a multi-disc case, an old PC big-box, or a regional variant — pick the Custom preset. CoverStitch will stitch your images at their original dimensions without resizing, which is the right behaviour when you've already prepared each panel to the exact pixel size you need. See the case dimensions reference for measurements you can use to prepare custom panels.

Preset matters A PS2 cover preset (130×184mm) is not the same size as a PS5 preset (128×148mm). Using the wrong preset means the spine title won't sit centred when folded, and the front/back will overhang the case edges. If you're not sure which preset to use, measure the inside of your physical case with a ruler and match it to the dimensions table.

Printing Best Practices

Choosing paper

Paper choice does more for the final look than the printer itself. Plain copier paper looks washed out, feels wrong inside the case, and curls within weeks. Photo paper is the standard for a reason. Here's how the common options compare:

PaperFinishBest for
Glossy photo paperHigh shine, vivid colourOriginal retail-style covers, most modern game cases
Satin / lustre photo paperSubtle sheen, less reflectionA close match to most real DVD/Blu-ray inserts; hides fingerprints
Matte photo paperFlat, no glareIndie/custom designs; shelves with strong overhead lighting
Plain copier paperFlat, thinTest prints only — never for final covers

Aim for 200–250 gsm paper weight. Thinner paper feels cheap and bows inside the case; thicker paper than 250 gsm often won't fit cleanly behind the case window. If your printer specs cap at 220 gsm in the photo paper tray, don't push past that — you'll jam the rollers.

Printer settings — actual size, every time

This is where most prints go wrong. Open the file in your printer dialog and check that "Scale to fit", "Fit to page", "Shrink oversized pages" — whatever your driver calls it — is turned off. Set the print scale to 100% / Actual Size. CoverStitch already outputs the file at the precise physical dimensions for the preset you chose. Any scaling at print time defeats the entire point of using preset dimensions.

Other settings worth getting right:

Trimming

A guillotine paper trimmer gives clean straight cuts in seconds and keeps the front/back edges parallel. Scissors work but are slow and rarely produce perfectly straight cuts over a 270mm edge. Cut just inside the printed area — printers usually leave a 3–5mm white margin even with borderless mode on, and trimming inside the print is what makes the result look factory-made instead of homemade.

Score the spine fold lines lightly with a bone folder (or the back of a butter knife) before bending. This prevents the printed surface from cracking or "checking" along the fold, which is especially noticeable on glossy paper with dark spine art.

Laminating (optional but worth it)

Running the trimmed cover through a laminator gives it the same scuff-resistance as a commercial insert and roughly doubles its lifespan. Use 80-micron pouches — thicker pouches (125-micron+) make the cover too stiff to fold cleanly and often won't fit behind the case window. Laminate first, then trim — the lamination film extends a couple of millimetres past the paper edge and needs trimming flush. Cold laminating sheets (peel-and-stick) work too if you don't want a hot laminator; the result is slightly less durable but no equipment investment.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions

For PS2, PS5, DVD, Blu-ray, Switch, and Steelbook covers, A4 (210×297mm) or US Letter (216×279mm) in landscape orientation will fit. Steelbook full-wraps at 290mm wide are the closest to A4 width — enable borderless printing if your printer supports it. For oversized cases like PC big-boxes or multi-disc collections, you may need A3.
Most printers leave a 3–5mm unprintable margin by default. Either enable "borderless printing" in your driver settings, or trim the white margin off with a guillotine cutter after printing. The CoverStitch output itself doesn't add any margin — the white space is added by the printer.
No. Any modern inkjet or colour laser printer that accepts photo paper and prints in landscape A4/Letter will work. Inkjets (especially photo-focused ones from Canon, Epson, and HP) generally produce richer colour on glossy paper. Colour lasers are sharper for text-heavy back covers but can struggle with photo-quality colour. Even a basic home printer will produce acceptable results on good paper.
DPI (dots per inch) is the resolution at which printers render images. 300 DPI is the print industry standard — at that resolution, individual dots are too small for the human eye to see at normal viewing distance, so the print looks smooth. CoverStitch outputs all presets at 300 DPI by default. Source images at lower DPI will print soft because there isn't enough detail to fill the printed area.
Yes. Pick the Custom preset and CoverStitch will stitch your images at their original dimensions without resizing. Prepare each panel (front, back, optionally spine) at the exact pixel dimensions you need, then upload. This is the right approach for PC big-boxes, oversized collector editions, multi-disc cases, region-specific variants, and other non-standard formats.
No. CoverStitch processes everything locally in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas API. Your images never leave your device. There's no account, no upload, and no server-side image storage. You can verify this by opening browser DevTools → Network tab while using the tool — you'll see no requests carrying your image data.
Three usual causes. First: you printed with "fit to page" or "scale to fit" enabled, so the whole image shrank and the spine no longer matches the physical case width. Reprint at 100% / Actual Size. Second: you used the wrong preset (PS2 spine is 14mm, Switch is 10mm, Blu-ray is 12mm). Third: the source spine image was the wrong width before you uploaded it. CoverStitch resizes panels but can't fix a misshapen source — start from a correctly-proportioned spine.
PNG. PNG is lossless, so what you see in the preview is exactly what gets printed. JPG compresses the image and can introduce subtle artifacts, especially around sharp text on the spine. The file size is larger but disk space is cheap and the quality difference is visible on close inspection.
Yes, but it requires a duplex-capable printer and careful alignment. Most retail covers don't have inside artwork, so this is a niche use case — usually for custom collectors' editions. CoverStitch outputs the outer wrap; you'd need to prepare the inside art as a separate file and run the paper through a second time. Test the alignment with plain paper first before committing to photo paper.
Use pigment-based ink rather than dye-based if your printer supports it (most photo-focused Epson and Canon printers offer pigment inks). Pigment inks resist fading from UV light and last decades; dye inks can fade noticeably within a few years on display. Laminating also blocks UV and adds protection. For a shelf out of direct sunlight, dye-based prints on photo paper still hold up fine for many years.

Ready to make your cover?

Drop your front, spine, and back images into CoverStitch and get a print-ready full cover in seconds — free, no signup, all in your browser.

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