I have to say this made me think - I don’t really have a policy in place to evaluate the advice I give unless I know that the frame is going to be in an exceptionally vulnerable place - or that it was a very large piece of work and glass could present a problem by its sheer weight.
I will now advise customers to use acrylic with more thought of the positioning of the frame - but, what a can of worms! Who has the responsibility of care here - If a local doctors comes in for a certificate frame and I sell him a bog standard black hockey A4 frame that he then hangs said frame in his surgery. Whose fault is it if little Johnny comes along and knocks the frame off the wall causing mayhem and injury to others in the surgery?
I suppose it could be the Doctors - he has responsibility for specifying a frame that has no glass that could be accidentally broken. Johnnie’s mother could be accused of being irresponsible in her care - allowing her child to run wild. Is it the framer who should have said - I notice this is a medical certificate - will it hang in a public place where you have small children intent upon physical harm with a shard of very sharp 2 mm glass.
Should I ask customers if they have small children running amok in their house, and if so should I demand that they use acrylic - or add a long clause to my order form stating that the parents had been informed of the risk and it was their choice to ignore me - gosh! that could be a long form.
We were told that several framers had been prosecuted, but I’ve not seen any news of this and will therefore take with a large dose of doubt, its factual basis. It does though make you think!
