How to choose the right glass for your artwork
Standard, conservation and museum glass — and when each is worth it.
Glass is the part of a frame people think about least and notice most. Get it wrong and a beautiful piece sits behind a mirror of reflections, or fades quietly over a decade in the wrong light. There are three broad choices, and the right one depends on the work and the wall.
Standard glass is clear, inexpensive and fine for prints of no great value hung away from direct light. Conservation glass adds a UV-filtering layer that blocks the majority of the ultraviolet light responsible for fading — the standard we use for anything original, sentimental, or irreplaceable. Museum glass goes further again, combining UV protection with an anti-reflective coating so the glass all but disappears, letting you see the artwork rather than the room behind you.
If a piece carries financial or emotional value, conservation-grade glass is rarely a decision you regret. We'll always tell you plainly what a particular work needs, rather than defaulting to the most expensive option.
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Glass Guide
Find your glass in four questions
Answer four quick questions and we'll suggest the right option for your piece.