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Taking Better
Pictures - Part 2
Special Treatment
for Special Photos
Are you a
"closet" photographer? Someone who takes
beautiful photographs of friends and family and promptly
stacks them in a shoe box on the top shelf of the front
hall closet? 
Instead of burying your work in
the family time capsule and waiting for the year 2001 to
rediscover it, why not put the best of it out for others
to enjoy? You can purchase several inexpensive photo
albums and fill them with family treasures. Albums make
interesting conversation pieces and are a nice
alternative to coffee-table books. Everyone enjoys
rummaging through other people's lives--all it the
voyeur in us all. And what better opportunity to show
off your photography?
For greatest effect, organize
your prints into chrono-logical order. Attach
self-sticking labels to the backs of prints for captions
like "Yosemite, 1972, Janie, Paul, and John"
and mount the prints chronologically into the albums.
Label each album with a number and the dates of the
photos inside. If you're really ambitious, tape an index
of each photo to the inside of the album cover. In that
way, you'll be able to retrieve prints more quickly.
Personal computers make indexing simple and easy, and
printouts can be created to accommodate albums of
various sizes.
You can also have your favorite
prints or slides made into enlargements-from 5 x 7
inches to poster size-for framing. Start out with
acid-free archival mat board, available at framing shops
and many photo stores, to highlight each print. Mat
board comes in a wide variety of colors, sizes, and
finishes.
Next, have a sheet of glass cut
to size. You can use either inexpensive window glass
available at hardware stores and home centers or
specially made non-glare photographic-quality glass
available at framing shops. The choice is a matter of
personal taste and budget. Finally, finish the job by
choosing a frame that complements the matted print.
Frames come in a wide variety of sizes and shapes from
oval and round to pentagonal and everything in between.
If you find your-self overwhelmed by the options
available, ask for advice. Although framing costs vary
widely depending upon style, size, and material, a
typical 11 x 14-inch frame with matting and glass may
cost anywhere from $3 "off the rack" to more
than $40 for a custom job.
As a viable alternative to
high-priced custom framing, you can go to a
do-it-yourself framing shop. Although the materials will
cost about the same as at a custom frame shop, you'll
save approximately 1/2 the total framing cost on labor.
The clerk will instruct you on how to use the equipment.
For a more creative framing
job, you might consider combining several photos into a
single photomontage "matted or not, as you desire.
It's an especially creative an inexpensive way to
display several photos in a single frame. Whichever way
you decide to proceed, just remember that framing is a
once-in-a-lifetime proposition. Once the job is done,
it's done for good.
When it's time to hang your
photos, take a few moments to organize them into groups.
It helps to lay Out the framed photos on a large table
or on the floor. Move them around, interchanging one
with another until you find the arrangement you like
best. In that way, you'll get a preview of how the
prints look in various combinations-without pounding
unnecessary holes in the wall. Then sketch the
arrangement on a piece of paper so you don't forget what
prints go where and start hanging.
You photographic displays need
not be confined to conventional forms. One creative way
of displaying your favorite images is to make a mobile
out of them. Apply non-staining photo cement to the back
of one print and press the end of a two-foot length of
lightweight monofilament fishing line against the glue.
Then take a second print of the same size and glue it
back-to-back with the first. One the cement dries,
you'll have a two-sided photographic
"sandwich" with a line extending from the top.
Repeat the process with other
prints of varying sizes and attach the lines to a wooden
dowel, a piece of driftwood, or a wire hoop suspended
from the ceiling. The result: a beautiful and creative
free-hanging photographic mobile. Still another fun way
of displaying photos is the use them to cover various
objects such as boxes, jars, and tin cans. The result:
instant receptacles for such possessions as paper clips,
pens, pencils, and assorted knickknacks.
For a personalized paperweight,
cover a pint-sized cream carton with photos, fill with
sand or pebbles, and seal. For a special family
treasure, cover a plastic flower pot with photos, spray
with water-resistant photo varnish, and fill with soil
and a plant. Remember, there are thousands of ways to
display your photographs around the house and in the
office. And every single one of them beats hiding them
away in a shoe box!
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