Canva now lets you create custom sections and categories inside your Brand Kit. Understanding when they’re worth adding (and when they’re not) keeps your Brand Kit useful rather than just organized.
Read NowCustom asset categories in Canva’s Brand Kit let you organize your logos, photography, graphics, and other brand assets into named groups — so your Brand Kit stays navigable as it grows.
Read NowBefore someone reads a single word of your content, they’ve already formed an impression. When imagery isn’t consistent, your brand can feel scattered, even when colours and fonts are perfectly on point.
Read NowPhotography isn’t a requirement for a cohesive visual brand. For some businesses, building without photos is a deliberate and practical choice — here’s how to do it consistently in Canva.
Read NowThe Brand Kit works best when it’s curated rather than comprehensive. Here’s a practical test for deciding what imagery belongs there, and what’s better stored somewhere else.
Read NowChoosing fonts for the first time can feel more complicated than it needs to be. For most small businesses, the answer is simpler than Canva’s library makes it look.
Read NowScript fonts are easy to reach for and easy to overuse. When that happens, designs become harder to read, harder to reuse, and harder to maintain — here’s how to use them intentionally.
Read NowYou choose fonts you genuinely like, apply them to a design, and still end up with something that feels slightly off. This is usually a pairing and hierarchy problem, not a font problem.
Read NowColour consistency doesn’t fall apart because of bad taste — it falls apart because of decisions made without a defined palette to work from. Here’s what that looks like and how to fix it.
Read NowIf your designs still don’t look quite right even though you like your fonts, the problem is usually not the fonts themselves, it’s how they’re being used in relation to each other.
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