Archive for the 'Art and Stuff' Category

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A Monster’s Guide to Framing Art, Giclee Prints, and Photos

Lately I’ve been talking a lot about my art collection in general, and vintage photographs in particular. I’ve been framing some pieces, and have to comment that one of the annoying things about collecting art and photographs is that very often the framing materials cost more than the piece itself. This makes me bitter, and so a lot of times I’ll get frames from thrift stores. For framing photos, I very often get the cheap black aluminum frames that you can get at art stores. Depending on what I get, though, I always make adjustments.

Here are some things to keep in mind when framing art, “giclee” digital prints, and photos:

  • Always use archival acid-free materials.
  • Don’t use glue to mount your art to a board.
  • Cellophane tape does not belong anywhere near art.
  • Depending on your budget, use U.V. blocking glass.
  • Make sure photos don’t touch the glass.
  • Don’t use harsh cleaning materials during the process.
  • Handle everything as little as possible, and use photo handling gloves when doing so.

Natural Enemies of art, giclee prints, and photos:

  • fingerprints
  • extreme temperatures
  • moisture
  • light, especially UV light
  • improper handling and environmental factors
  • time
  • love – OK OK not love. Sorry.

Sixteen Sunshine Girls

Here’s our project today. This is an original photographic print from 1927 by White Studios in New York. The photo shows the “Sixteen Sunshine Girls” scene in an early 20th Century operetta called “Good Morning Dearie” by Jerome Kern and Anne Caldwell, about which there is actually a surprising amount of information on the Internets. It’s a little strange that the photo is dated 1927 when the production ended in 1922. This is one of my favorites from my collection. It is graphically appealing, excellently composed, and has a fascinating subject. It may be somewhat culturally insensitive now, but I adore the early 20th Century obsession with the orient. On top of all that, it is a technically excellent photo and print.

Close up of Sixteen Sunshine Girls

With old photos like this, I’m not the owner. I’m just the person who will be taking care of them for now, and I get to have them around as a bonus.

So let’s get detailed about framing:

These days archival, acid-free mat materials are basically the same price as everything else, so you may as well ask for them when buying mat board and other framing materials. When I buy used frames, I try to make sure that they’re old, made from metal or solid wood and plaster, and weren’t manufactured from press-board. Most cheap frames you’ll get at framing stores today are made from composite wood products. These products are not inert, which is to say that they are out-gassing chemicals. With used frames, I replace all the mat boards in case they aren’t archival quality.

When framing photos and art, you don’t want to use any kind of glue or adhesive except in some very rare occasions. You will find that it is advantageous to mount photos to the backing mat board using mounting solutions that don’t stick to the photo itself. With small photos, it’s OK to use the photo mounting corners that one would use in albums. For larger photos, there are mounting edge strips. These are strips which adhere to the backing and have a fold that the edges of the photo tuck into. Some real pros will use special strips of linen to hinge photos to the framing mat board. I’m not into that, though, because it’s not something that is easy to remove without damaging the photo.

Photo Handling Gloves

Before you do anything, wash your hands. This will remove grease and sweat from your fingers, and you’ll do less damage to everything you touch. Then put on your photo handling gloves. Next get everything out and ready to go. Mat board, backing mat board, frame, glass, art, and whatever will be used to mount the photo to the backing board. Consider that what you’re doing when you frame a piece of art is that you’re putting it in a bubble that is designed to protect it.

Part of the job of the mat board is to hold the surface of your piece of art away from the glass. This is especially important with photos because they are notorious for adhering themselves to glass when given the chance, which ruins the photo. So, using your method of choice, you want to mount the photo to the backing board. Then add the framing mat board (or boards) on top. Did I mention that I love how sepia photos look with black and white? Also, if you’re using a frame that needs assembly, put it together as much as possible before you get to the glass. You always want to do the glass last. Why? Because you’re going to clean the glass, and during the few moments between the time you clean it and when you get it into the frame, that glass is going to be collecting dust, furiously.

UV protection glass

Let’s talk about glass for a minute. Most framing shops have three or four grades of glass. There is plain old glass. Don’t buy this glass at an art shop! You can get this cheaper at hardware stores that will cut it to the size you want, usually for free. The first grade up from plain old glass is glass that is kind of frosted to have a matte surface so that it doesn’t reflect. Generally, this looks like crap, and I don’t recommend it. The next grade up is glass with UV protection. This glass filters out almost all of the UV (ultraviolet) light that hits it. UV light degrades both the colors of the photo and the physical photo itself, making it more brittle. This damage happens a lot faster than you would expect. (See note #1 at the very end). The next grade up usually has UV protection and an anti-reflective coating. The anti-reflective coating works to make the glass “invisible”, and really does a good job when viewed from directly in front of the picture. Unfortunately, when viewed at angles, it can cause green/purple color casting. Check out the photo below for an example of what that looks like. It’s mostly visible in the reflected light from the windows there, but you can see some green just to the left of the photo.

Purple and Green Casting from Anti-Reflective Glass Coating

Of course, the UV protected glass with the anti-reflection coating is expensive. To give an example, the 16 x 20 inch piece of glass for this photo had these prices:

  • Glass from hardware store: $6.00 US
  • UV Protection Glass: $19.00 US
  • UV Protection and Anti-reflective coating glass: $28.00 US

One last grade that is sometimes available is a clear acrylic sheet with the UV protection and the anti-reflective coating. The benefit of this material is that it is much less expensive than the glass equivalent. However, this stuff scratches if you look at it wrong, cannot be cleaned with regular solutions, and can never escape that sort of cheap “feel” that clear acrylic sheet has.

As I mentioned above, what you’re doing when you frame a photo is sealing it up. So besides the mat board and mounting, a monster has to consider what is being put into the environment that the picture is being sealed up in. As a result, during the framing process, you don’t want to use anything harsh (read: Windex) to clean the glass. All such cleaners also leave a film on the glass. Instead, I use very little of a mild dish washing liquid, a sponge, and a lot of water. Glass usually has grease left from the manufacturing process, so a little soap is necessary to take that off. Once the glass is clean, I really try to rinse all of the soap off of the glass with the water. Then I dry the glass thoroughly with paper towels. Once the glass is mostly dry, I put on photo handling gloves. They keep you from leaving fingerprints on the glass, and will also keep sharp glass edges from cutting your fingers.

So clean that glass, put on the gloves, put the glass onto the matted picture (with the fancy glass, make sure to put the right surface facing in), and put it in the frame. Then inspect the result. If you’re like me, you’ll never get it 100% perfect the first time. A huge piece of dust will have zipped in there before you could get the glass onto the picture, or there will be a spot of residue on the glass that didn’t come off when you cleaned it, and is only visible now that you’ve put everything together. If you got lucky, the residue will be on the outside so you can clean it off without taking everything apart. If not, take it apart and take whatever action is necessary to clean the glass of dust and residue. In the case of dust, you may be able to take it off with a fingertip of your photo handling glove. In the case of residue, I usually take the glass back to the sink and wash the whole thing again.

Label the back

OK. Got the glass 100% clean, and the frame put together? You’re not done yet. Don’t forget posterity! Label the back with any information you have about the photo, giclee print, or art contained in the frame. So: List the artist, print number, date, gallery it was shown at, person in the photo, photographer, and etc. I also leave a note about the glass. At this point, professionals use paper and adhesive to seal the back. While there is no way to seal the art in 100%, this step helps to minimize oxidation, changes in humidity and temperature (see note #2). I don’t currently do this, but most professional framing shops will.

Finished Framed Photo

Done!

Notes:

Note #1 – About UV or ultraviolet light: Most giclee digital prints today are made with UV resistant inks, so if you’re framing a print made in the past couple of years, and the print won’t be hung anywhere near sunlight or fluorescent lighting, you may not have to worry so much about UV. It is also the case that storm windows being made now usually have UV protection. One way to test this is to lay down in a sun ray coming through the window. If your windows have UV protection, you won’t feel nearly as much heat as you will through a regular window.

Note #2 – Ideal temperatures for storing and displaying art are considered to be 65-70 degrees Fahrenheit. Ideal humidity is in the range of 35-50%. So yeah, you’re probably thinking that your basement is nice and cool, but basements also tend to be too wet. Monsters who are SERIOUS about art conservation also will never hang their art on the outer walls of a building, because of the temperature variation.

The World We Live In

Things are getting more and more. Every day, I see evidence of this. What do I mean by “more and more”, you ask? Observe:

Theo Jansen has created small 3D printed versions of his famous Strandbeests that can be purchased from Shapeways. The smaller these get, the more they resemble a cross between a cat and a giant centipede. Check here for more videos, including one where Jansen talks about his fascination with 3D printing as it relates to his creations.

Dominic Wilcox, inventor of the inflatable sock lamp and the screw-in coffin, has done it again:

Finger-nose stylus for touchscreen technology from Dominic Wilcox on Vimeo.

Delicious weird vintage photo. Mmmmmm.

Ode to Princess Beatrice

Oh Princess Beatrice.
I love your hat.
Some say that it reminds them of Cthulhu.
All the better, I say, to eat them with.

Princess Beatrice in Hat, Waving

Princess Beatrice stepping out of car in hat

Princess Beatrice's Hat

Project – Stereo Viewer for Vintage Glass Slide

3D is all the rage, isn’t it? I tell you, it’s getting so you can’t swing a cat without hitting something that’s got 3D technology these days. I know that I’ve mentioned in the past that I have a small art collection. In addition to that, I collect vintage photos, which I’m betting isn’t exactly a shock to anybody who reads this blog with any regularity. Recently, I acquired a nice stereoscopic glass slide of an actress in a crazy hat. Yes, I know I know it’s not exactly the most macabre subject matter in the world, but frankly vintage macabre photos are ridiculously expensive because they are macabre. For example, in the past it was common to take postmortem pictures of children where they were posed as lifelike as possible with their siblings and/or favorite pets and/or toys. THAT’S a macabre photo collection item. My tastes don’t run that way, though. And it’s a good thing because that would be pretty expensive – vintage postmortem photos can go for hundreds of dollars.

The Glass Slide

This lady was definitely a live one when this was taken. Isn’t she a peach? I decided that I wanted to make a stereo viewer for her, but I wanted to keep things as inexpensive as possible (and still use archival quality materials where it counted). Here’s the shopping list:

  • A stereoscopic viewer from a used 3D book ($3.00 used).
  • Black foam core board
  • Shadow box ($10 at an art store)
  • 2 El Cheapo LED flashlights ($5 at Home Depot)
  • Misc wires, paper, aluminum foil and a switch I had sitting around.
  • Black mat board

An Exploded View of the Light Box

So basically, there’s a light box that fits inside of the shadow box. The construction plan was to take the LED flashlights apart and put them in the light box. Then stick the slide on top of that, put it into the shadow box, and attach the viewer to it.

El cheapo LED flashlight set

Here are the flashlights I took apart for this project. The nice thing is that these came with their own batteries in packs, too. So I was able to pull the LEDs out and also the battery packs, and just add wiring and a switch (double pole single throw). A little soldering and voila!

The LEDs were a pain to pull out of these flashlights, but I got them out in one piece. Another good thing about using these is that the company who builds them has figured out the right number of LEDs and what kind/number of batteries should go together, so there’s no need to add resistors and no guesswork on our part.

Next, I measured the glass slide to see what size holes should be cut in the foam board and also the mat board. Then I cut them both.

Mat Board and Foam Core Board

The mat board cutting is one of the only things in this project where a person needs a little skill and the right tool to do the job. I happen to own a nice but basic mat cutting kit that I used for this job.

Once you’ve got them cut out, it’s time to glue a piece of paper over the holes in the foam board. I used rice paper. I think it’s ideal for this purpose because it’s a little translucent, and also rice paper is naturally acid-free.

Foiled Again

Then I glued sides onto the foam core, built a little compartment for the batteries, mounted the lights, ran wire, and covered the inside of the light box with aluminum foil. That’s a lot of steps to mash together, but that’s kind of how it happened. The aluminum foil serves make the light box brighter. I didn’t pay any attention to how the foil crinkled, because I was hoping that it would also help to diffuse the light.

LED placement in the light box

After some careful consideration and playing around with the LEDs, I ended up mounting them pointing up at an angle. So the light from the LEDs actually has to bounce around before it’ll hit the rice paper. This worked really well for making the light bright and even over the entire pictures when viewed from outside.

Here is the view from the front of the light box with the glass slide and mat board on top of it. So this was put into the shadow box.

Here it is in inside the shadow box. The wires that run to the switch are coming out the bottom there. I used a double pole single throw switch. This means that the switch closes two circuits with one push button. That way I don’t have to worry about the voltages in series or parallel or however I would have to work it out if I had to make it all one circuit. This keeps it simple. And simple is good. I happened to have one of these switches in push button form around because I’m a mad scientist in my spare time, but you could probably find one at Radio Shack for a buck.

So all that was left to do was to cut the stereo viewer out of the used book and then cut it down to size for the box. I don’t know very much about how stereoscopic viewers are built. I’ve seen ones that use prisms to help your eyes think that the two images go together. The stereoscopic viewer from the book seems to be made with two magnifying glasses. This is good because the images on the glass slide are pretty small and benefit from some magnifying.

So: I cut the stereo viewer out of the book, added some black paper to make it look nice, and mounted it to the shadow box at the right distance from the picture. To do this, I just measured the distance from how the book was put together and used that.

Here’s a good shot of one of the sides of the slide. Lookeng good. Now it just needs more steampunk. Or something something. This photo is obviously from the 19th Century, from the clothing and the hat. I don’t usually collect items from this time period, preferring my beloved 1920s and ’30s. But this picture spoke to me. Even if it isn’t creepy.

Annable Masterpiece Framed

I mentioned recently that I had ordered some art from the Grickle Store (since then Annable has added a new option – Doodle Requests). Anyhow, ten clams, TEN CLAMS! buys you a print of Annable’s awesome Nosferatu on a shark, which comes in a signed black envelope. I ordered mine and have already framed it. I didn’t know what to do with the envelope. I mean, it’s signed and everything, so it seems a shame to just frame the picture and then throw out the envelope. Here was my solution: Cut a matt for it, and put it on the back of the frame.

The envelope

The Envelope

The Envelope Matted

Nosferatu on a Shark - Perfect in a Vignette Matt

The Envelope Lurks Behind

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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