What is a canvas transfer

 

 

Canvas Transfer

First, the print is coated, sprayed or brushed with a special glue combination that seizes the ink. After drying, the paper is removed carefully with a water chemical mix, so the resulting ink film can be transferred to the high quality artist's canvas. Staples are on the sides of the stretcher bars. Rigid standards and meticulous attention to detail maximize ink retention, paper removal, and bonding. At this point, the picture has an image true to the original painting with a lustrous, beautiful sheen and rich canvas texture. This is known as a basic transfer.

All canvas transfers are cropped to the image so that there is no white boarder on the front of your finished piece, The only time it is not done this way, is you, the customer, making specifications on that particular piece.

 

Brushstrokes

This is a special technique that is done by hand. It reproduces the brush strokes of the artists original intent. It is carried out by our professionals, who’s only job is to make this reproduction onto the print by emphasizing the depth, the tones and the shadings of the colors, therefore making the art work more realistic.

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Museum Wrap

Museum wrap is the process where the canvas is wrapped with all sides showing the white part of the canvas, all of the image is on the front. Some choose this to eliminate the need for a frame. Staples are on the back of the stretcher bar that the print is on.

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Gallery Wrap

Gallery Wrap is virtually identical to the process of Museum Wrap except for one detail, It will not allow any white canvas to show on any of the sides, it will be wrapped with all of your image, staples again on the back of the stretcher bar.

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