Summer parties mean more people viewing your decor and less time for you to spend on decorating your house. Creating an art gallery in your home is a great way to achieve high impact with modest effort. Your art selections will tell your guests a lot about your personal style. Plus, a home art gallery is easily changeable to suit the season, a special occasion or your mood.The art preservation experts at Tru Vue, a Chicago company that makes preservation quality glass for the framing industry, offer these tips for creating your home art gallery:
Consider creating a family portrait wall. Galleries also look great lining a staircase wall. Hang artwork at eye level for someone of average height. Place smaller, more detailed pieces in small spaces, like hallways, where impact is less important than content.
"An independent custom framer can enhance your pieces through their design talent, creativity and knowledge of preservation products like acid-free mats and ultraviolet protection glass or acrylics," says Kathy Carter McLin of Tru Vue. "Galleries and museums maintain a controlled environment so that light and humidity do not damage their artworks. Each piece in your home gallery is just as important to you."
Custom framers can help protect your gallery pieces from fading, becoming brittle or yellowing with age by using the proper mounting techniques and quality glass such as Tru Vue Museum Glass and Conservation Series glass and acrylics. Acrylic products, are more lightweight than glass and provide a secure environment for artwork. They are a great alternative to glass if you are creating a gallery for a child's room, a high traffic area of the house, or if your home is located within an earthquake zone.
Tru Vue products are available at most custom framing shops. To learn more, visit www.tru-vue.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content




. Questions of a Do It Yourself nature should be submitted to our "