Last fall, we somehow ended up purchasing a number of prints and posters. Since then, I have been intermittently making frames for them. This has been a good exercise in learning about framing that doesn't involve 2x4s. I thought I would create a new thread to share them and add to it as more frames come in.
One benefit of this has been working on cutting my miters by hand. I always need to clean them up with the shooting board, but I am ending up with much tighter miters than I have ever previously gotten. So I suppose it has been good practice using my plane for shooting miters.
I just finished this one today - a poster my girlfriend has been hanging onto for years and it has never had even a plastic frame that was properly sized for it. In this case, the wood is lyptus and the plugs are 1/4" ebony. The joints are all dominoes. [big grin] The finish is Osmo polyx.
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This one is a gift for a friend who is an aspiring writer. The frame is Catalpa and it has a few coats of ultra blonde shellac finish. I really like the smell of Catalpa when cutting and planing it. However, it is a pain to do finish prep - it scratches very easily and willingly.
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Last one(s) are three in air dried walnut with curly maple splines. Finish is Osmo. Inspired by a vacation in the Pacific Northwest that we took last fall. The Sasquatch thing is big there, and there were lots of whimsical chainsaw carvings of bigfoot all around. It's something we look back on fondly, especially now when it might be some time before we can responsibly return.
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I think I'm down to four remaining posters. Looking forward to exploring some new techniques with them, including doing a veneered frame. I'm not really sure how I will do that one yet, but i think I may veneer over solid wood so I can easily shoot my miters. The idea of shooting MDF just doesn't sound like a good time.
One benefit of this has been working on cutting my miters by hand. I always need to clean them up with the shooting board, but I am ending up with much tighter miters than I have ever previously gotten. So I suppose it has been good practice using my plane for shooting miters.
I just finished this one today - a poster my girlfriend has been hanging onto for years and it has never had even a plastic frame that was properly sized for it. In this case, the wood is lyptus and the plugs are 1/4" ebony. The joints are all dominoes. [big grin] The finish is Osmo polyx.
View attachment 1
View attachment 2
This one is a gift for a friend who is an aspiring writer. The frame is Catalpa and it has a few coats of ultra blonde shellac finish. I really like the smell of Catalpa when cutting and planing it. However, it is a pain to do finish prep - it scratches very easily and willingly.
View attachment 3
Last one(s) are three in air dried walnut with curly maple splines. Finish is Osmo. Inspired by a vacation in the Pacific Northwest that we took last fall. The Sasquatch thing is big there, and there were lots of whimsical chainsaw carvings of bigfoot all around. It's something we look back on fondly, especially now when it might be some time before we can responsibly return.
View attachment 4
View attachment 5
I think I'm down to four remaining posters. Looking forward to exploring some new techniques with them, including doing a veneered frame. I'm not really sure how I will do that one yet, but i think I may veneer over solid wood so I can easily shoot my miters. The idea of shooting MDF just doesn't sound like a good time.