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Old 23-05-2008   #31
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Thank you for the help!! Those are pretty interesting ideas

It was for two gallery shows which unfortunately had started a few weeks ago and will already end this Sunday.
The thing about my fabrics is, the edges of each one are jagged (I had trouble weaving them straight), so I had to hide the edges. What I did was take mat board cut to 6 x 6 and then i placed the fabric on top, folding the edges under... behind the matboard. I stretched it from the back ---instead of stapling, like in your suggestion, I just sewed strings at one edge to the other edge, stretching it taut as I went along... This way, it didn't damage the fabric.
They all hang separately on the wall... It's kind of a series I haven't even visited my exhibitions yet...so I don't know how they hung them on the wall. I only tied string across the back of board so it would hang from a tack on the wall, but I'm not sure if it will lay flat on the wall like that...

The other series I had are prints, and the fabric is fairly light and fine and I just mounted it on mat board using mounting tape. Then I cut a square with a square inside (a frame) of mat board and put it on top, to cover the edges of the fabric... using more mounting tape. The nice mounting tape has styrofoam sandwiched between two tapes, so it gave a nice 3-dimensional quality

Now I realise mat board is not too difficult to cut
In fact I'd tried to cut it in one swipe in the beginning, so no wonder I almost gave myself arthritis This time I went over the incision about 3x and the slice was nice

I'll post the last set of fabrics (my paper ones) after this Sunday. I sewed the fabrics on to stiff paper and taped it to foamcore, applying another layer of foamcore on top, for framing each fabric and yarn sample. This one was harder to cut cleanly... because of the styrofoam in the foamcore... a little messy... (Foam core is just two glossy papers sandwiching about half-a-cm of styrofoam)
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Old 23-05-2008   #32
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Just discovered this thread, one of my new favorites!
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Old 23-05-2008   #33
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gius -

Thank you for the follow-up explanation – we’re all counting on you to supply photos of your work!

The fomecore – yes, I am quite familiar with this product and its use in framing. For readers who are not - - I found this lovely set of instructions on how to cut this product and achieve a very clean edge. All credit goes to The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum – where they use an abundance of this material for their presentations...

- - Extremely large panels of fomecore are best cut using a table saw [if you have one or know someone who has one...]

Smaller projects - -











Hope this helps the effort to successfully work with this material.

Footnote – The Herbert Hoover Library and Museum also provided a very nice explanation of their tested ‘best products’ to use for attaching materials to fomecore. But I’ll cover that in a separate post.

Best regards.
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Old 23-05-2008   #34
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Thanks for the instructions
Now I remember when I first learned how to frame, we did that too-- cutting on an angle, but we used a board that had the special blades and rules installed, so all we had to do was move the blade

I'll practice this today then ! with some scrap pieces
The messiest part was the 'inside square' of the foam core frame that I made... if that makes sense
The corners...
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Old 23-05-2008   #35
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The How – To’s of attaching materials to fomecore
[credit in this section belongs to The Herbert Hoover Library and Museum]

- Paper-to-fomecore and fomecore-to-fomecore
- - Double sided tape - - inexpensive – has the strength for paper-to-fomecore projects – usually stocked with regular adhesive tapes in most stores [aside from paper towels, this is my most purchased item in life – I love this stuff ]

- - fome tape - - rather expensive – can be purchased in large rolls [art supply stores, office supply, hardware stores] - - good point to know is that packages of small pre-cut pieces can be purchased for smaller ‘one-time’ needs to avoid the investment in a large roll. - - This is a ‘foamy’ tape that is strong enough, when used to hang posters on a wall, to take plaster along with it when one attempts to remove it. This adhesive is best used to attach fomecore-to-fomecore, but it will ‘show through’ from the reverse side of paper, which limits its use.

- - spray adhesive - - works well to attach paper-to-fomecore, but not strong enough to adhere fomecore-to-fomecore - - Has many limitations - requires a well ventilated workspace – fumes are strong and unpleasant - requires a steady hand to distribute the spray without creating a ‘puddle’ which will not dry properly...

- - white glue - - will work with paper-to-fomecore and with fomecore-to-fomecore, but tends to wrinkle paper. This is an inexpensive product to purchase, which makes it a ‘plus’...

- - cold mount - - very expensive – best used for paper-to-fomecore projects - - art supply shops stock “Scotch PMA” [PMA = Positionable Mounting Adhesive] – comes in rolls and is effectively a large roll of double-sided tape. This tape is applied to the fomecome and then rubbed to each surface [your paper and then the paper-to-fomecore] to remove bubbles/air pockets and achieve a smooth surface

- - velcro - - very good for fomecore-to-fomecore projects, but not suitable for paper-to-fomecore – it will show through the paper.

- Fabric to fomecore
- - best to tape fabric onto the back-side of the fomecore once fabric has been appropriately stretched [varies with weight of fabric] across front of fomecore.


Note: If you have the available storage space – save the scraps from your fomecore trimming – scraps can be cut-to-size and used as ‘spacers’ to separate the frame from the object being framed.

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Old 13-06-2008   #36
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I love these mirrors, does anyone know where I get ones like it?

http://img233.imageshack.us/my.php?image=0110qs9.jpg
 

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Old 14-06-2008   #37
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this thread is so inspiring!
i have a few blank walls that i'd like to cover with various framed photographs!
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Old 14-06-2008   #38
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So here's the fabric I put under foamcore as mentioned earlier...

It's fabric/yarn stitched to stiff paper and then I used double-sided tape to mount it to the back of the foamcore. Squares in the foamcore had been cut prior

Unfortunately I don't have my camera, so I just scanned it
So there is too much light and you can't see exactly what's going on. Anyway these lines appearing in this picture, they are folds (not cuts). So, I guess after time the foamcore paper folds on itself

I don't really think I hung this work in the gallery like this. It would have probably been rejected So I'm guessing it appeared when I removed it and brought it home...
Anyway you can see the squares, on the inside the cutting is terribly irregular --I had a real issue with that

Here's another part of the work:

Hopefully you can see them this time --they are cuts. When I made corners, I would cut a little bit ahead.. so that I could remove them easily. But it's very ugly I am guessing if I cut it at the 45* angle, it would be fine? I don't know how I could cut at that angle though... Maybe a ruler with a 45* angle that I could rest the blade on while cutting...
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Old 15-06-2008   #39
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Quote:
Originally Posted by - JMJ - View Post
gius -

Thank you for the follow-up explanation – we’re all counting on you to supply photos of your work!

The fomecore – yes, I am quite familiar with this product and its use in framing. For readers who are not - - I found this lovely set of instructions on how to cut this product and achieve a very clean edge. All credit goes to The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum – where they use an abundance of this material for their presentations...

- - Extremely large panels of fomecore are best cut using a table saw [if you have one or know someone who has one...]

Smaller projects - -


Hope this helps the effort to successfully work with this material.

Footnote – The Herbert Hoover Library and Museum also provided a very nice explanation of their tested ‘best products’ to use for attaching materials to fomecore. But I’ll cover that in a separate post.

Best regards.
I've done framing in a museum ... and we don't use "utility knife" ... but a manual machine ...
but for DIY it's a good idea ...
think that the "product" (fomecore in english ??) doesn't have to be too thin or it wouldn't be really nice in the frame and around the picture ....
it's really easy to do honestly, after one ...

My parents got all their (good) photos framed by "artisans" ...
it's always beautiful ... My father offered once a picture to my mom of her dad (my grand dad) ... the picture is framed in a beautiful frame () but there's nothing like fomecore ... it's like in a gap ... i find it very good ...

and i have two Happy New Year's card framed from ... M. YSL ....
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Old 15-06-2008   #40
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here they are ... not sure you can really see well ...
- photos by me -

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Old 15-06-2008   #41
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Graphic designer Lisa Bengtsson

'Familjen'




images from www.lisabengtsson.se
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Old 15-06-2008   #42
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^ wow i'm confused.. what is going on there hanne... is it wallpaper?. or is it hanging from that washing line that goes across the room?....it's very cool... but a bit of a mind-bender...
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Old 15-06-2008   #43
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^yeah, its a bit crazy to look at.
at first i thought it was a painting...
but then I kept staring at it...and got a little dizzy...
i think its interesting...nonetheless
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Old 15-06-2008   #44
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it's wallpaper
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Old 15-06-2008   #45
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BerlinRocks View Post
I've done framing in a museum ... and we don't use "utility knife" ... but a manual machine ...
but for DIY it's a good idea ...
think that the "product" (fomecore in english ??) doesn't have to be too thin or it wouldn't be really nice in the frame and around the picture ....
it's really easy to do honestly, after one ...

My parents got all their (good) photos framed by "artisans" ...
it's always beautiful ... My father offered once a picture to my mom of her dad (my grand dad) ... the picture is framed in a beautiful frame () but there's nothing like fomecore ... it's like in a gap ... i find it very good ...

and i have two Happy New Year's card framed from ... M. YSL ....
Oh is that your father's "embossed" collection?
It's great..

I think they are using matboard there. It is a harder and stronger board for framing the work. And then they put it under glass with another more decorative frame.
Foamcore is just styrofoam (polystyrene) sandwiched between two sheets of glossy paper.

I used a "manual machine" when I first framed my works too, but at my current school they don't have it. I just have trouble cutting at an angle... You can see in your father's framed works, the matboard under the glass is cut at an angle.

---

Hanne it's cool you can put little photos/artworks in the 'fake' frames
Very cute
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