Featured Anyone cut their own framing mats?

Discussion in 'Art' started by Jeff Drum, Oct 27, 2024 at 8:52 PM.

  1. Jeff Drum

    Jeff Drum Well-Known Member

    As I go through (very slowly I’m afraid) the prints and paintings I’ve accumulated, some of them need to be remounted in acid-free mat boards. This is somewhat urgent to halt doing further damage on some nice old pieces. I’ve already done this for some of the pieces I have, cutting replacement mats by hand using razor blade and straight edge. And the results are, as predictable, less than professional looking.

    If anyone here has bought a semi-professional setup for home use, and can make recommendations on what tools are needed without being overkill, I would appreciate the advice (and I’m sure others would benefit also).

    What should I buy?
     
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  2. moreotherstuff

    moreotherstuff Izorizent

    I once had a thing called a Dexter Mat Cutter, from Russell Harrington of Southbridge, Massachusetts, that was a manual tool that would slide over the mat surface holding a fixed utility knife blade at a steady angle. Didn't personally like it, but it got snapped up wen I listed it. The mats I cut, I did manually with a straight edge and holding a utility knife at an angle for a bevel. It worked well enough.

    Mat Cutter - b.JPG

    Mat Cutter - a.JPG
     
  3. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Dexter or Logan Mat Cutters are both excellent-once you get the hang of it you can master it.You'll also want UV protective glass and acid free/neutral backing.
    With a chop saw you can also make your own frames.You'll prob also want a brad- nailer,and a clean work table....nothing like dandruff on your original Lautrec litho !
     
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  4. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    Former framer, still married to a framer...

    Logan is a fine brand for mat cutting. You can buy the hand held type that is cheaper, or the kind that runs on a rail and has stops. The Rail kind is more expensive but much easier to use since it's going to give you the correct angle, depth, straight cut, and has stops so you don't over cut your measurements. Professional framers use this type, but of course much larger. If you have many to cut, go ahead and spend the extra money to have backup blades. Once they dull, they will drag your mats.
     
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