
mounting a watercolour done on board
mounting a watercolour done on board
hi, what would be the best way to mount a watercolour done on board? Would a t-hinge be too weak to hold the watercolour to the mountboard? i want to put a double mount over the watercolour. any suggestions would be most welcome. apologies for asking lots of questions, im a complete novice 

ok, thanks roboframer. Just to get this right in my head.... place the watercolour face down on the mount, position it, tape the 4 corners and build up with mountboard strips so the mount is the same thickness as the board the watercolour has been painted on. do i use fp90 tape to stick the mountboard strips?
Depends what quality of board the thing is painted on.
Pointless using preservation grade board if the painting is stuck to carp, if it's stuck to 'acid free' board then it's already backed OK. Even if you backed it with MDF it would take donkeys before it had any adverse effect.
'Artbak' type board should be fine.
Pointless using preservation grade board if the painting is stuck to carp, if it's stuck to 'acid free' board then it's already backed OK. Even if you backed it with MDF it would take donkeys before it had any adverse effect.
'Artbak' type board should be fine.
What Robo said....
I get these all the time. Great way to use up all those silly long bits of mb that accumulate. To save a bit of time, don't bother measuring /trimming the strips to fit. Stick oversize bits on first, turn the mount face-up and trim off the excess.

I get these all the time. Great way to use up all those silly long bits of mb that accumulate. To save a bit of time, don't bother measuring /trimming the strips to fit. Stick oversize bits on first, turn the mount face-up and trim off the excess.
Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About
Surround the whole board. Makes the whole thing neater. If everything is level at the back.
You are using what is basically scrap anyway.
I tend to put the strips round without sticking the painting down first. Then attach the painting to the strips with a short bit of tape on each side. easier if you ever want to remove the painting from the mount. (which I sometimes do).
You are using what is basically scrap anyway.

Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About
But also use a straight steel edge or a kevlar glove, or both, the straight edge will prevent the blade going off track and trashing your mount; the glove will prevent this............prospero wrote:To save a bit of time, don't bother measuring /trimming the strips to fit. Stick oversize bits on first, turn the mount face-up and trim off the excess.
