CathyA
9-23-16, 9:25am
I have several prints from my favorite wildlife artist. They've always had that conservation glass on it, which mutes reflections to sort of a white haze, as opposed to reflecting obvious other things. Supposedly though, the further away from the print it is applied, it may cause too much muting. Well, I had heard that museum glass is the best for getting rid of reflections and it's VERY expensive. But I wanted the best for this print. So I had a very good art gallery put it on....especially after one person there raved about the lack of reflection in it. Well, I hate it. It reflects everything....and in funky colors.
The more I read up on museum glass, the more I realized that it's for absolute clarity of the image, and NOT reflection control. Bummer. I will take it back and have the less expensive, but more acceptable glass put on it.
I'm hoping that they'll at least give me some credit, since this was a large piece of glass and they could use it for other smaller pieces. What do you think?
Have you ever used "museum glass" and had very little reflection? What would be reasonable to ask of them? It was probably my ignorance, but they did show me an illustration piece that compared 3 types of glass and the museum glass had no reflections......and the head guy told me he likes it because reflections "ruin the whole experience."
I know having this type of thing probably isn't "simple living", but it's my splurge, and they will only increase in value, and it's something to give my children eventually......and the images are stunning, and remind me how incredible nature is.
The more I read up on museum glass, the more I realized that it's for absolute clarity of the image, and NOT reflection control. Bummer. I will take it back and have the less expensive, but more acceptable glass put on it.
I'm hoping that they'll at least give me some credit, since this was a large piece of glass and they could use it for other smaller pieces. What do you think?
Have you ever used "museum glass" and had very little reflection? What would be reasonable to ask of them? It was probably my ignorance, but they did show me an illustration piece that compared 3 types of glass and the museum glass had no reflections......and the head guy told me he likes it because reflections "ruin the whole experience."
I know having this type of thing probably isn't "simple living", but it's my splurge, and they will only increase in value, and it's something to give my children eventually......and the images are stunning, and remind me how incredible nature is.