I am new to this forum and have been reading the posts for few months and like the warm and informative responses the members leave to questions



Thanks
Gengus
Apologies if I'm preaching to the converted, but if you haven't already got your Lion catalogue, you can order one from their website. On top of the books they offer, the catalogue is an education in itself for the beginner (I'm only on the go for 2½ years myself).The Crofter wrote:.... Lion do a good selection...
You are wise to seek opinions from other experienced framers about tuition! Some tuition can be detrimental.bexwell wrote: I was tempted by the Lion course but is a day too short?
Well you've gotta start somewhere and one day will enable you to cover the basics, but that's about it. The fact is that there is a lot of knowledge required to be competent at all levels of framing. Some of that will take quite a bit of time to acquire.bexwell wrote:So what courses would members recommend, has anyone been on one that they would recommend - or not recommend. I was tempted by the Lion course but is a day too short?
These to me are the most NB. I go into a gallery or exhibition and the first thing I look at is the visible workmanship and not the physical attributes of the materials. The paying public see the exact same things as me and who will be prepared to pay good money for a job that looks the pits irrespective of archival quality. As honest artisan I will use the best materials possible to protect the customer's property but they are not going to protect my pocket if the work is crappy ( even if I tell them ... but the materials are perfect and will last forever)If a joint has a small gap or a mat has an overcut, or the design doesn't look awesome