You don't need a full design team to produce solid Meta ad creative. Adobe Express and Canva have matured into genuinely powerful tools for creating static and video ads quickly — especially for teams that need to move fast and test frequently.
This guide covers how to use both tools effectively for Meta ad production: the right sizing, the template approaches that work, the features worth knowing, and when to use each tool.
Meta Ad Sizes You Actually Need
Before you open any design tool, get your canvas sizing right. Using wrong dimensions means Meta will crop or letterbox your creative, which tanks performance.
9:16
1080 × 1920px
Reels, Stories — highest reach, most native
4:5
1080 × 1350px
Feed video/image — best for Feed placements
1:1
1080 × 1080px
Square — versatile, works across most placements
Start with 9:16 for Reels/Stories and 4:5 for Feed. If you only have bandwidth for one, 9:16 is the priority — it's where Meta is driving the most volume.
Adobe Express: Best For
How to Use Canva for Meta Video Ads
Canva's video editor is surprisingly capable for quick ad production. Here's the workflow that works best:
- Start with a blank 9:16 canvas (1080×1920). Avoid starting from templates — they tend to look templated, which is the opposite of native.
- Upload your UGC or product footage directly into Canva. Trim clips, adjust timing, and sequence them in the video editor.
- Add captions as text overlays using the text tool, not the auto-caption feature. Manual captions let you emphasize key words, match your brand font, and control exactly what viewers read.
- Use a solid color or blurred background for text sections rather than complex graphics — keeps the focus on the content and feels more native.
- Export at 1080p, MP4. Avoid Canva's "Compressed" export setting — use "High Quality."
Caption Tip
Always add captions. 85% of Facebook videos are watched without sound. Your first 3 seconds of captions are as important as the visual hook — they give audio-off viewers a reason to turn sound on.
How to Use Adobe Express for Static Ads
Express shines for static image ads that need to look polished and brand-consistent. The Brand Kit feature is genuinely excellent — lock in your fonts, colors, and logo once, and every template you touch auto-applies them.
- Set up your Brand Kit first. Upload your logo, set your primary and accent colors, and choose your typefaces. This takes 10 minutes and saves hours across every future project.
- Use the Quick Actions tools for image prep: background removal, image enhancement, and format conversion before you bring assets into a design.
- Start from a blank canvas at 1080×1350 (4:5) for Feed or 1080×1920 for Stories. Use your product image as the hero, add a single strong headline and CTA. Keep it simple.
- Use Firefly AI to generate lifestyle backgrounds when you don't have photography. Describe the scene you want — it's fast and surprisingly good for e-commerce context shots.
What "Native-Looking" Actually Means in Practice
The biggest mistake people make with both tools: using templates that look like ads. Canva and Express both have templates that are beautifully designed — and immediately recognizable as designed. The moment something looks like a Canva template, it triggers ad-blindness.
Native-looking ads share these traits:
- Minimal or no graphic design elements — no abstract shapes, gradients, or decorative borders
- Real photography or video, not stock imagery
- Simple typography — one font, reasonable size, not styled with multiple weights and colors
- Text overlaid on video rather than beside it
- No visible logo in the first frame (add it at the end if at all)
Use the tools for efficiency, not decoration. The best-performing static ads are often a great product photo with one punchy line of copy. Both tools can produce that in under 10 minutes.
When to Use Which Tool
- Use Canva when you need to produce video ads quickly, work with a team simultaneously, or need to create many variations fast.
- Use Adobe Express when brand consistency matters, you need static ads that look polished, or you're working within the Adobe Creative Cloud ecosystem.
- Use both — Canva for video, Express for static — and you'll have a complete lightweight ad production stack that can produce new creative in hours, not days.
For UGC-style video ads, neither tool replaces the production workflow of briefing a real creator, capturing authentic footage, and editing for performance. But for supplementary static creative, quick variations, and caption overlays, they're genuinely excellent. See how we handle full UGC production when you need the real thing.