This invention is associated with art work mounting fixtures.
Art work in the form of photographs and graphics printed on opaque paper or translucent film is typically framed and used as decorations or promotional items. Often the art work is sent as rolled up paper or film and is then mounted and framed at another location.
Such art work could be mounted at the point of production on a backing medium and framed, but transporting it would be costly and pose damage risk.
It would be useful if there was a backing medium that provides the solid feel of a rigid medium but could be rolled up to allow easy and safer transport.
The invention herein disclosed and claimed is a medium that can be rolled up for transport, and when unrolled, forms a solid-feeling medium suitable for framing
The medium thus formed is a layered structure having a solid sheet on the front side, and a sheet on the back side made up of parallel strips of material that adjoin one another creating a solid surface when unrolled, but allows the medium to be rolled up for transport. An optional middle layer can be included which creates an air gap between the front and rear sheets using a flexible material that has been fan folded or corrugated. This intermediary layer gives the unrolled structure a greater thickness while still allowing the composite-layer structure to be rolled up for transport.
In addition to the medium, the system includes horizontal, vertical and medial support structures that create a frame for the unrolled medium and its mounted art work.
Art work on paper or film is often mounted on backing and framed for use as decoration or promotion. If mounted and framed at the location where the art work is produced, then transportation costs and risks of damage may be high. If the art work is rolled up, transported, then mounted and framed, transportation costs and damage risks may be lower but additional time and costs are incurred at the receiving end.
The invention herein disclosed and claimed is a medium designed to allow art work to be mounted onto a rigid surface that can also be rolled up for lower cost and lower risk transport. When it arrives at its destination, the mounted art work can be unrolled and in so doing forms a rigid composite structure ready for framing.
The medium is implemented by having a solid sheet of material, a front sheet, and a rear sheet of material created by side-by-side strips of material which form a solid surface when flat but allow the surface to expand when rolled up.
In
A thicker medium could be implemented by having an intermediary sheet of material (201) sandwiched between the front sheet (104) and rear sheet (101). The intermediary sheet could be fan folded as shown or corrugated (not shown) to create an air gap between the front and rear sheets for greater thickness. As shown, because of the structure of the rear sheet and intermediary sheet, the composite structure formed by the three sheets of material will allow it to be rolled up.
When the composite medium is unrolled, it will form a rigid structure essentially equivalent to having two front sheets glued together to be double thickness. If an intermediary sheet is employed, the unrolled medium has the added thickness due to the air gap. The thickness of that air gap is determined by the dimensions of the fan fold or corrugation dimensions. Prior to rolling up the medium, while it is planar and rigid, an art work (301) can be mounted to the front sheet (104) as shown in
When the medium with mounted art work is unrolled, it can be framed using a set of horizontal, vertical and medial support structures. The assembled frame is shown in
In another embodiment of the system, one horizontal support structure is equipped with a string of light sources (901) operative to source light into the edge of the intermediary sheet. Where the front and intermediary sheets are made of translucent material, and the art work film is translucent, the light source will illuminate the art work.
Note that the materials used for the front, rear and intermediary sheets can be opaque or translucent. The materials used for the horizontal, vertical and medial support structures can be any material sufficiently rigid, such as wood, hard plastic, metal and the like. The light source for the horizontal support structure embodiment can be any technology that produces sufficient illumination and meets the heat and power consumption requirements, such as LED light sources.