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Show Notes:
In this episode, Sami's Marcus Cederberg C-print from Episode 20 needs framing. Zahra's Cuban painting from August has been waiting for the same treatment. They both assumed framing was simple — pick a frame, done. Then they met Thierry, a professional framer in Lyon, and discovered they'd been thinking about it completely wrong.
Between learning why off-the-shelf frames slowly destroy your investment and watching Thierry reject every aesthetic choice they suggested, Sami and Zahra get schooled in the art of framing. The rules: the artwork comes first (forget your sofa), match the frame to the art's personality (not your house), don't compete with the color palette, and trust the expert when they say no.
But first — the backstory. How did Zahra's Cuban painting even make it to Lyon? The answer involves Trinidad, a sketchy kiosk, rum at 9 AM, and Sami bargaining while genuinely hungover. Sometimes the best art purchases happen when you're too sick to overthink.
Highlights:
- Why Sami and Zahra finally got their artwork professionally framed
- The Cuban painting backstory: Trinidad, sugarcane rum, and bargaining while nauseous
- Meeting Thierry the framer in Lyon — and realizing they knew nothing
- The first rule: the artwork comes first (not your house, not your sofa, not your aesthetic)
- Match the frame to the artwork's personality, not your decor
- Don't compete with the art's color palette
- Why off-the-shelf frames slowly kill your investment
- Materials breakdown: natural wood (up 22% in 2024), metal/aluminum, floating frames (70% of galleries use them)
- The main purpose of framing: protection — not aesthetics
- Acid damage: how standard backing destroys paper over time
- UV rays and glass options: from 45% to 99% UV protection
- Why Thierry kept saying "no" to their suggestions (and why they're glad he did)
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