Friday, April 8, 2016
Salvaging Pictures from Books
Salvaging Pictures from Books
Ready made art from books -- love it! A pair of prints-- divine! |
One of my favorite ways to score stage-worthy prints for framing is buying books, picture books.
Youll find these books for a song at garage sales, estate sales, flea markets, and thrift stores. Look for glossy coffee table books as well as quirky childrens literature, esoteric text books, travelogues, anything with large, good quality pictures.
Even small books, the right ones, will provide pages that can be framed with wide mats that make them bigger and artsy, or combined into collages.
So, when youre rummaging through a pile of these discounted volumes, let your imagination wander. Need examples?
So, when youre rummaging through a pile of these discounted volumes, let your imagination wander. Need examples?
How about a gallery wall of framed pages from a book on the history of hot air balloons or the bicycle? Or line drawings from a college botany textbook? Sheet music? Quilting patterns? Maps? Or food porn from cookbooks?
Every autumn I look forward to my public librarys annual book sale. Most libraries sponsor some version of culling and selling their older, obsolete, or duplicate books and periodicals. Often these volumes can be high quality coffee table books with page after page of beautiful prints.
These are some of the over-sized books Ive found on second hand shelves. At my Goodwill store and ReStore outlets, all hardbacks are $1.00 no matter what the size. Bingo! |
If the edges of a page are worn, they can be trimmed off or hidden behind the mat. Black and white pictures are fine. If theres any text and its a foreign language, it only adds to its quirkiness.
Last year I found a large-scale book of orchid prints at the library sale. Botanical prints are perfect for staging a home thats traditional, country, cottagey or even grand and formal. They have the same impact, to a lesser degree, that adding real plants to a room has.
I thought I would have to spray these mats with Kilz but a closer look told me it was only the prints that were stained from age. |
A page from the book about Scotland yielded this handsome landscape. |
I simply removed all the backing, and cleaned both the frames and the glass well. Its important when re-framing like this to work in a well lighted, clean environment. Have a roomy work surface and cover it with a clean blanket or lint-free quilt.
Keep double-checking your work because the last thing you want is to tape your backing on only to discover fingerprints under the glass or a piece of dust on the mat.
I use white duct tape on the back to secure the original cardboard or foam core backing to the frame. A professional frame shop would choose an acid free paper and water-based glue, but duct tape always works for me when Im home staging.
I use white duct tape on the back to secure the original cardboard or foam core backing to the frame. A professional frame shop would choose an acid free paper and water-based glue, but duct tape always works for me when Im home staging.
Tips to success: Use a microfiber cloth to clean the glass. For a fussier approach (in case you are using valuable artwork) including tips on choosing a frame and mat, go to this article at Todays Home Owner about how to frame pictures like a pro.
Framed, a delightful watercolor illustration from a Madeline book made some stage-worthy art. |
My eBook How to Arrange Furniture A Guide to Arranging Furniture Using What You Have, gives more pointers on choosing and using wall art. You can download it now for just $4.99.
Salvaging Pictures from Books