prospero wrote:Greetings Cubic Framer.![]()
I must admit that I do tend to shy away from 3D framing. It's not that I dislike it, it's more because people are generally unwilling to pay a realistic price for the work involved, which in some cases is considerable.
A lady came in a while back with a spray of flowers made of icing. Very delicate. It was off her ruby wedding cake and all contructed with thin wires. I knew that it would take hours to make it secure enough to hang on the wall. I told her in all honesty that I would have to charge £200+. just for the labour and the flowers would probably all disintegrate in a few years anyway.![]()
Let me ask you this: What is the weirdest thing you have ever been asked to frame?
There were so many weird things, and to case an item of taxidery was not unusual, however as a presentation piece, a cock pheasant had a ducks head grafted on. The amalgamated name of this monstrosity was a 'Dusant Phuck' and was described as end of species.
The taxidermist who did the work was extremely skilled and it looked superb, I invented the text without any prompting, it may have since been copied.(though probably a rather obvious invention)
Now to business, one of the reason that I am setting up some of my equipement is to do just this job.
A lady who is a very skilled sugar icing worker, has given several commissions over the years. After I closed down, she got in touch about a piece that she had done for her third sons wedding, as far as I know all the previous items going back 7 years are surviving.
In her work the icing is very hard, she accepts that it may not last forever, but cased it is going to have a longer life than not. Framers sometimes shoulder too great a burden of conservation.
Given the ability to make a cover there a 2 options of presentation, horizontal or verticle.(Obvious, but the framing industry is yet to embrace the concept of horizontal framing.)
A transparent cover set in a picture frame becomes a verticle 2 piece case and the 2nd piece is very simple back to which this type of work is relatively easy to fix and leads to less aggessive methods of securing the back.
This leads to second option, horizontal framing,
Can be cheaper.
More suitable to softer icings.
Pose the question when will the client want to display, usually when friends are about, so the suitability as a table decoration may be an option.