Yesterday I made frames for three paintings so I can display them in a show sponsored by Poulsbo Artist League, of which I’m a member. Framing can be very expensive if you use a commercial framing shop, so most artists I know use a number of workarounds. In the past, I’ve re-used frames from cheap art I bought at Goodwill, or bought the rock-bottom frames at JoAnn’s.
Recently, however, I was given a whole set of framing supplies by a woman whose husband was a watercolor painter before he died eight years ago. She’s finally cleaning his stuff out of the garage, and offered them to me if I would share them with the members of Poulsbo Artist League, which I’ve done.
So I have many lengths of wood frame stock and a machine to press the special staples into the corners. In my wood shop, I cut the frame pieces to length, then I join them together using the framing machine. I also have a large supply of glass, which I’m learning to cut to size for each frame. Then I use a mat cutting tool which helps me cut clean openings in the mat to highlight the art work. Here are the three paintings I framed up. In the next two weeks, I have two more group shows to enter, so I’ll be framing up eight more pieces of art.
It’s amazing how framing a painting makes it look more professional and complete. A well-chosen mat makes the painting pop right out, and the frame sets it off on the wall. Just framing my paintings makes them look much better to my eye!
I’d say you’ve entered the professional world of watercoloring, if you weren’t already there.
Thanks, Warren! I don’t feel like I have to sell my paintings to validate myself as an artist. I get enough satisfaction from the painting itself. But it would be nice to sell a few, and it would be great if the sales would help pay for my painting materials.