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#1
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I seem to be at a dead end on trying to figure out how to frame a panoramic photograph? Has anyone had luck buying frames big enough to house these photos or are the frames custom made? The photo I am trying to frame is about 9x48. Just trying to get ideas on how other people display them.
Thanks, CJ |
#2
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you might get lucky and find a frame that might work, but that's not a standard size, and if you want it to look really nice you should probably go ahead and get a custom frame and mat. The good news is that most places that do custom framing have a hugh number of frames with some nice lower end frames that look nice and that won't break the bank. Also, I recommend you spend a little more and get some UV glass so that the photo doesn't fade.
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#3
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Yard sales, thrift shop or at Home Goods or similar, they carry generic, framed decorations for kitchens, bedrooms etc. Disect it, custom matte and replace the glass with UV. They often have irregular frames that can b painted.
I found a wide, old frame for my Cleve. Pano at Salvation Army for $1. |
#4
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I buy any and all panoramic frames when I see them at yard, garrage and flea market sales. Content doesn't matter it is all for the frame
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#5
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There are framing shops that make their own frames. If you have one near you, just give them the measurements and they'll customize it for you. We have a shop like that right in our neighborhood.
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#6
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You could frame it without a frame-- meaning behind glass or plexiglass but without the surrounding frame. Someone gave me an old movie poster like that between glass and board and it looks nice and professional.
Last edited by drc; 04-26-2012 at 12:26 PM. |
#7
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Hi, I bought a reproduction panorama photograph that was pretty large. I priced a bunch of frames but most were just way too expensive. If you have a repro panorama you could cut it in sections and buy borderless frames and hang them with a minimal gap. It looks pretty good. Kinda artsy too. Of course if you have the real deal don't do this. Most real panorama pictures are worth a mint so just pay for a good matte and frame.
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#8
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Some craft stores have sort of mix-and-match frame sides that are sold in pairs (so if you needed a 7"x48" frame, you would buy a pair of 7" sides and a pair of 48" sides, or slightly larger depending on how you're matting it). Even at that though, I'm not 100% certain that they go up to 48", and you would still have to have glass and matting cut to fit.
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#9
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Good framers can make the frame to size. They have lengths of material and cut to length.
There's also a system that lets you make semi custom frames yourself. The company sells individual sides in pairs, And they're made to connect with clips that come with them. Glue, clip, wait a day and you've got a frame. I've seen the sides up to about 3 feet long and as short as I think 4 inches. And they have nice depth so you can do a nice mat and backing. The places that sell the frame bits can usually cut the glass too, my local is a framing shop that has regular, UV blocking, and "museum glass" which both blocks UV and limits glare. It all comes out looking pretty good Steve B |
#10
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Thanks for all the help. The photo was very inexpensive so I really didnt want to pay a fortune to frame it but I may have no other choice.
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#11
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The sectional frames are inexpensive, And easy. Here's a video on using them.
http://www.michaels.com/Wood-Section...framing-videos Or the panoramic might fit a frame like this? http://www.michaels.com/3-opening-bl...s-framing-wall It comes with a mat that has 3 cutouts. Either swap it for your own, or trim out the cross pieces. Overall it can be pretty inexpensive if you can do it yourself. The frame I did above was I think maybe 20 for the frame, a couple pieces of matboard at $6 each since I used two colors. The museum glass was the most expensive bit at around $25. plus some incidental stuff like fishing line to hang the medals from and acid free photo corners to hold the paper items. Even if I had to buy the tools like the xacto knife I'd have been under $100 The whole thing took me a couple hours to layout ,cut and assemble. Steve B |
#12
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Heres a look at how I did it with 8x10 frames. real cheap.
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#13
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Randall - That looks great.
Doug |
#14
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I got my 44x8 panoramic professionally framed (and chemically treated) for $200
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THEANTIQUETIGER.COM Last edited by theantiquetiger; 04-29-2012 at 08:10 AM. |
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