Hi all,
anyone advise the best products for cleaning glass and also a high bond tape to hold prints/board into a mount?
Thanks
Best cleaner & tape
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Re: Best cleaner & tape
I've always used Bohle glass cleaner but other people have their own preferences which are no doubt just as good.
Not sure of the way you are using the tape.
Not sure of the way you are using the tape.
Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About
-
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Mon 01 Oct, 2018 4:51 pm
- Location: wigan
- Organisation: The Creative Art Company
- Interests: art
photography
renovation
Re: Best cleaner & tape
Thanks for that.
On the tape its basically to hold down and unstretched canvas print behind a mount boar aperture.
On smaller pieces people want framed I'm painting on unstretched canvas then taping it to the back of the mount board so the image sits correctly in the aperture, not too professional but its quick and does the job, just want a direct applied tape that will guarantee a long term fix.
On the tape its basically to hold down and unstretched canvas print behind a mount boar aperture.
On smaller pieces people want framed I'm painting on unstretched canvas then taping it to the back of the mount board so the image sits correctly in the aperture, not too professional but its quick and does the job, just want a direct applied tape that will guarantee a long term fix.
Re: Best cleaner & tape
As you say, not exactly professional. Mounts are for paper-based works. Canvas doesn't take kindly to being mounted the same way.
Most pressure-sensitive tapes will dry out and fail within a few years. The better tapes such as Filmoplast P-90 will fare better, but aren't
really man enough to attach to canvas. Linen tape might be OK, but that is a quite expensive option.
You would be better off wet-mounting the canvas to board and taping the board to a mount, but that's more of a long-winded process.
You might get away with just laying the canvas on a slightly larger piece of mountboard and taping the board to the mount. Filling up the
rest of the back of the mount with scrap bits to level it. That would only work on very small things though....
Fact is, you are trying to frame something in a way that really isn't practical for it.
Most pressure-sensitive tapes will dry out and fail within a few years. The better tapes such as Filmoplast P-90 will fare better, but aren't
really man enough to attach to canvas. Linen tape might be OK, but that is a quite expensive option.
You would be better off wet-mounting the canvas to board and taping the board to a mount, but that's more of a long-winded process.
You might get away with just laying the canvas on a slightly larger piece of mountboard and taping the board to the mount. Filling up the
rest of the back of the mount with scrap bits to level it. That would only work on very small things though....
Fact is, you are trying to frame something in a way that really isn't practical for it.
Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About