Add some personality into your interior with a photo gallery wall featuring framed photo prints of you and your loved ones.
Are you sick of staring at bare walls day after day? Filling in blank wall space with family photos is a simple yet effective way to add some personality to the home. They also make for great conversation starters for when guests come over because you can share about your most precious memories and travels.However, finding the perfect way to decorate with family snapshots can be a little tricky.
Today we are talking about DIY Photo Display Wall Art Ideas as a means of exhibiting our past for everyone to see it.
I mentioned last week when I shared the recent updates I’ve made in our entry that my goal is to completely fill this hallway, floor to ceiling, with framed family photos. It may take me months or even years, but I plan to continue building this gallery wall over time. And I’ve already added a […]
This is a Reprint Photo **This is a Reprint** You are looking at a Classic Signed Autograph Reprint of the above celebrity. The Size of Photo is 8x10 inches A reprint is a more economical way to have your Favorites Celebrity Autographs. This would make a Great Gift for someone who is a true movie buff, Add a Frame and proudly display on your wall. This photo will be sent to you wrapped in a plastic sleeve and surrounded by cardboard, to protect from bending. Shipped USPS First Class If you are looking for anyone special, Please contact me as I have been collecting signed autographs for around 25 years or more. I have many and I may have just what you are looking for to add to your collection
Since 2006, Brooklyn-based artist Patrick Winfield has been creating incredible photo collages by photographing and recreating scenes using a large number
Want je foto's verdienen meer dan alleen maar in een Facebook-album gestopt te worden.
Accidental Mysteries is an online curiosity shop of extraordinary things, mined from the depths of the online world and brought to you each week by John Foster, a writer, designer and longtime collector of self-taught art and vernacular photography. This week's focus is taxonomies.
We’ve been getting a LOT of questions lately about personal photo display ideas in our inbox. Maybe it’s just a coincidence, or maybe we just have a bunch of readers who are starting in on decorating for Spring with all those new family pictures that got taken the past few months… either way, if you know…
In that keepsake collection of school photos every mom has stashed in a file or maybe...
What do you do in Tagaytay? Be lazy and satisfy your palates with good food of course! Hubby and i have not been back to Tagaytay for leisure in ages but thanks to Ninong R and his pretty wife C, w…
Usually we build up to the big reveal, this time, we want to show off from the start! Taking up this long hallway wall, we couldn’t be more pleased with the way this gallery wall has turned out. Friends and family, strangers, pretty much everyone that sees it, compliments this wall and asks for the details. Well, here they are! Our initial inspiration came from this photo in the Book Island Life: Inspirational Interiors. The idea was born! What now? Our first task was to find the shelves to rest the photos on. The most simple, inexpensive, and easy to connect (everyone needs different lengths) were the IKEA RIBBA Picture Ledges. We love when we can get something for under $10! After measuring the wall and doing some quick math, we were back home and hanging them. (In all fairness, due to the need for perfectly level shelves, we asked our finish carpenter to help us. Hey, we can’t do everything ourselves!) After the shelves were hung, the hunt for frames began. Sticking to a similar palette as the inspiration photo, we were able to re-purpose some of our old Pottery Barn frames. We also visited IKEA, Target, Aaron Brothers, Michaels, Hobby Lobby, and World Market. The goal was to look like we had collected frames from around the world and we accomplished this through a mixture of textures, materials, and styles. Staged eclectic? Faux global? Oh well… Finally, with all the frames collected, we were ready to build the wall. There are many ways one could go about completing this, but we arranged all the frames prior to putting photos in. Here is what it looked like when we were deciding where everything would go. Once we liked the composition of the wall, checking that all the frames were overlapped but still showing their photos, and that two similar frames weren’t near each other, we were ready for pictures! We made a list organized by size and orientation (vertical or horizontal) and then filled in the blanks. This is what our “schematic” looked like. Also, we made sure to take a photo of the wall before we started taking it down. Otherwise we wouldn’t have known how to put it back together! Finally, we filled our frames and re-assembled everything. We live in California and the wall is over a hardwood floor. To make sure it was earthquake safe, we anchored all the frames touching the wall and then used earthquake putty to secure the leaning frames. This was the part that took the longest – we just wanted to be done! Here is another look at the finished product. Enjoy!
Monroe's collaborations with photographers Milton H. Greene and Douglas Kirkland produced some of the most iconic images of her career.