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What to do with your paintings when you are redecorating your home
Once your painting is off the wall it is very vulnerable. Both the front and the BACK are vulnerable. Unless the reverse has already been protected with a cardboard backing you have no idea how many damages can occur. People forget that like a piece of window glass a painting may be broken from either side. A depressing number of accidents happen to paintings when rooms are being redecorated. Usually they are taken down off the walls and stacked in some "safe" place. The favorite stacking place seems to be a closet. If you are going to use a closet, please empty it first so things won't fall down on top of the paintings, and then LOCK it. Otherwise your children may decide that their skis, hockey sticks and skates should also be in safe storage; Grandma will shove in a bridge lamp as well, and your husband will thrust in his fishing rods! It is not uncommon that one or even several of these additions will pierce right through the paintings. So if you take the paintings down the wisest way to stack them is either in an empty closet which will lock or against the wall of a room not in use. In either case stack them with intervening cardboards so both surfaces are protected. Otherwise you run the danger of having the wire from one scratch the face of another, or the screweyes on the back of one frame dent into the surface of the next, and so on. See to it that the bottoms of the frames are prevented from sliding and slipping. You can use pillows again for this or pads of sponge rubber from the hardware store.  
If you have to, or prefer to, leave a painting on a wall which is going to be painted, or in a room when there is any decorating going on, PLEASE cover the painting completely with a plastic material. Plastic material or a waterproof fabric is best because then there is no danger of anything splashing through it. Even the most experienced painter is apt to spatter about a bit and the paint cloths which painters use to cover furniture are not very clean.
PROBLEMS IN TRANSPORTING PAINTINGS
The best way to have a painting moved is in the hands of a properly trained ART MOVER, but they are not always available and those not properly trained can do plenty of damage unintentionally. When you yourself have to transport a painting which has been torn or damaged, it is usually safer to do so with the painting kept in its frame. This is true for physical reasons. Most frames extend beyond the front surface of a painting and therefore no matter what wrapping people may use in arranging protection for transit, it cannot come in contact with the painted surface. However, frames come in all classifications. They can be more fragile than the painting they enframe, they can weigh a ton, be much too large, be one that the owner does not want to move. If this is the case, the best thing to do is to remove the painting from the frame and to make a strip frame for transportation.


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