How to Use FrameXpert Frame Designer to Build Perfect Frames

Upgrade Your Wall Art with FrameXpert Frame Designer: A Step-by-Step Guide

Overview

Quick, practical guide to designing and ordering custom frames with FrameXpert Frame Designer to enhance your wall art — optimized for speed and visual impact.

What you’ll need

  • High-resolution image or artwork (JPEG/PNG/TIFF)
  • Desired frame dimensions (height × width)
  • Style preference (modern, traditional, rustic, etc.)
  • Matting choice (color and width) and glazing type (glass, acrylic)
  • Budget range and turnaround preference

Step-by-step

  1. Prepare your artwork

    • Crop or resize to the target aspect ratio.
    • Ensure at least 150–300 DPI at final print size for crisp detail.
    • Save a copy in a lossless or high-quality format.
  2. Enter dimensions

    • Measure the artwork exactly (include any border you want visible).
    • Add extra for mat overlap (standard is ~⁄4”–1/2” under mat).
  3. Choose frame style and color

    • Select a frame profile that matches the art: thin metal for modern, wide wood for traditional.
    • Pick a finish that complements dominant tones in the artwork.
  4. Add mat(s)

    • Single mat: safe default—1.5”–3” width for most wall art.
    • Double mat: adds depth—use a narrow inner color accent (⁄8”–1/4”).
    • For floating or gallery-style mounting, choose wider margins and no mat.
  5. Select glazing

    • Standard glass for budget; anti-reflective or museum glass for display-quality.
    • Acrylic for large frames or lightweight needs.
  6. Configure backing and hanging

    • Use archival backing for valuable pieces.
    • Select hanging hardware appropriate to frame size and wall type.
  7. Review preview

    • Use the designer’s mockup to inspect proportions, mat spacing, and frame-to-art balance.
    • Zoom to check edges and color rendering.
  8. Finalize and order

    • Confirm measurements, materials, and quantity.
    • Check estimated production and shipping times.
    • Save or download the preview for reference.

Quick tips

  • For small artworks, use wider mats to make pieces feel larger.
  • Match frame tone to the room’s dominant finish (e.g., warm wood for warm interiors).
  • Test a small print before committing to a large, expensive frame.
  • When in doubt, choose neutral mat colors (white, off-white, light gray).

Common use cases

  • Family photos: simple narrow frame, 1.5” mat.
  • Fine art prints: museum glass, double mat, archival backing.
  • Posters: acrylic glazing, slim metal frame.

If you want, I can generate exact mat and frame size recommendations for a specific artwork size and style—tell me the artwork dimensions and room style.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *