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Canvas framing what type is this?

Impact Color

New Member
I’ve been trying to produce some canvas prints with the frames. I checked online and found several resources for stretcher bar frames. These are the ones that have the groove premade and uou just slide them in. The “challenge” is that they’re a little “expensive”. I got a frame off another canvas that doesn’t have the grooves and it appears they just staple them but I’m not sure what they’re called. I’m attaching some pictures does anyone know what these are called or where I can get them for a good price?
 

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sbergman

New Member
I am in the picture framing industry. We buy thousands of feet at a time and cut and join them ourselves. We just call them stretcher bars. Let me know....
1) where you're located
2) how many you need
3) size
4) width of stretcher bars

If you can cut and join them yourself you can buy the moulding direct from any of the following:
Decormoulding.com
Omega moulding.com
Larsonjuhl.com

Some of the above might even cut and join for you.
 

Impact Color

New Member
I am in the picture framing industry. We buy thousands of feet at a time and cut and join them ourselves. We just call them stretcher bars. Let me know....
1) where you're located
2) how many you need
3) size
4) width of stretcher bars

If you can cut and join them yourself you can buy the moulding direct from any of the following:
Decormoulding.com
Omega moulding.com
Larsonjuhl.com

Some of the above might even cut and join for you.
Thanks for the response! Size different ones but deep I’d like 1.5 inches. I’m in Los Ángeles. Quantities would vary.
 

Impact Color

New Member
I am in the picture framing industry. We buy thousands of feet at a time and cut and join them ourselves. We just call them stretcher bars. Let me know....
1) where you're located
2) how many you need
3) size
4) width of stretcher bars

If you can cut and join them yourself you can buy the moulding direct from any of the following:
Decormoulding.com
Omega moulding.com
Larsonjuhl.com

Some of the above might even cut and join for you.
What material would you recommend I look into?
 

iPrintStuff

Prints stuff
We buy in the ones with the pre made groove. As far as materials go they’re very cheap and save loads of time.

But if you’re really trying to squeeze every dollar try any woodwork shop nearby. Should be a fairly straightforward job for them.
 

bob

It's better to have two hands than one glove.
As far as I know, stretcher bars are always wood.

Not necessarily. IThe best stretcher bars I've used, and continue to use, are made from PVC brick mold available at any building materials store. The PVC is not only cheaper than wood, it's dead straight. Cut the pieces with a miter, put a bit of PVC cement on the edges to be joined, and staple the joints both front and back. I relieve the corners with a few strokes of a rasp. Not as light as wood but strong and straight. For larger frames, cross bracing is made from the same material. Just trim off the decorative part with a table saw yielding ~1"x2" sticks of PVC.

I've been doing this for quite a while and this is by far the best, and possibly cheapest, way to create a 1.25" deep and 2" wide frame that is as close to perfectly straight yet discovered.
 

Impact Color

New Member
We buy in the ones with the pre made groove. As far as materials go they’re very cheap and save loads of time.

But if you’re really trying to squeeze every dollar try any woodwork shop nearby. Should be a fairly straightforward job for them.
Where do you recommend for stretcher bars?
 

DeadDoc

New Member
We buy from stretcherbarwarehouse.com. There is probably better quality elsewhere. I occasionally feel the need to throw a bar or two away some days.
 

MrSherlock

New Member
I’ve been down that road with canvas prints too! I understand the struggle with the pricier stretcher bar frames.

It’s a bummer when you find the perfect frame but then see the cost. For the frame you got with no grooves, it sounds like they might be called "plain stretcher bars," where you stretch and staple the canvas yourself.

I’ve had similar experiences with custom framing, but I found a great deal on some affordable options at my local art supply store.
 
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