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Learning Center > How to Choose Picture Frames to Complement Your Home's Decorating Style
How to Choose Picture Frames to Complement Your Home's Decorating Style
http://www.ehow.com/how_14482_choose-picture-frames.html
Have
you ever seen a frame that either looked wrong for the picture or
wrong for the surrounding decor? Although there are no ironclad
rules for selecting frames, some general tips follow.
Steps:
- Remember that frames loosely fall into three
categories: traditional (often wood frames with some embellishment
such as ornate carving, Oriental accents, appliqu? curlicues,
or canvas or linen inserts), modern (metal or ultraplain wood,
perhaps only a sliver of it showing as you face the picture) and
transitional (minimal ornamentation with a moderate amount of
frame showing on its face).
- Choose versatility with a plain transitional
wood picture frame, either stained or painted, perhaps with a
simple stripe of contrasting paint color or metallic. These frames
work in nearly every decor and suit most styles of art; they also
can usually move from room to room easily.
- Use old-style, ornate gold frames in traditional,
often formal environments with decorating styles such as 17th-
and 18th-century styles, as well as with Victorian and English
country decor; they can also be used in eclectic-style rooms.
These frames generally work best with art executed in representational
(nonabstract) styles.
- Give yourself more latitude if your decorating
style is eclectic. Frames and artwork can mix it up a bit, but
you'll achieve a more harmonious atmosphere if there are other
furnishings in the room - perhaps a coffee table or chair - that
also reflect the style of the frame and picture.
- Consider hanging large abstract canvases without
frames. This is a handsome look in modern decor.
- Use the same or similar frames (and mats) to
unite a grouping. Black-and-white pen-and-ink drawings of varied
subjects blend nicely when all are edged with, say, black metal
or walnut-stained picture frames; color family portraits may gain
the same sense of unity with, for example, whitewashed wood frames,
pewter frames or brass frames.
- Ask for help from personnel at stores
where frames are sold, especially custom frame shops. They usually
have great advice for selecting a great frame and mat for a picture.
Tips:
Be careful not to let a frame overwhelm
a picture; this most often happens when a wide frame is placed
around a small or delicately executed work of art. Also, frames
can jar the decor if they're too large for the wall space or if
they're too fancy to be hung over, say, a casual easy chair.
When hanging artwork above a piece of furniture, place it in close
enough proximity - usually just a few inches above the furniture
- so that the eye takes in the objects as a single unit.
Don't let a dominant-colored mat make the artwork play second
fiddle. Neutral mats are usually best.
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