How to STRETCH A CANVAS PAINTING - easy and simple process!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 25 ม.ค. 2011
- #canvas #howto #stretching
See how to stretch a large sized canvas painting over a hardwood frame using an electric staple gun and a pin hammer. I guide you through where to start and more importantly how to finish.
If you found this video helpful, inspiring or entertaining, and you would like to buy us a coffee, you can donate using the Super Thanks button (the heart icon). It'll go towards paying for the next camera (as I seem to break them with alarming frequency!!!). Thanks for all your support - Ed an Ady
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This was the most helpful of all I’ve seen for large canvases! Thank you!
I'm so glad! Thanks for the feedback
11 years later, and your video saved me hundreds of dollars for stretching a 40x40" canvas and enjoying my own work! Thanks
Glad I could help!
Brilliant video. The close ups and explanations why are not easy to find.
Wow, that was the clearest demonstration of stretching I have seen to date.
Thank you!!
I needed a "NO B.S." tutorial on proper corner techniques and this really helped. Thanks so much!
You're welcome!
Followed your video instructions... did a new canvas and re-did two paintings. Worked beautifully. Thank you!
Great job! Well done 👍
Thank you so much from USA! I do resin art normally…..but, my cousin sent me a canvas print no frame. Bought and assembled frame pieces. Now I can finish!
Wonderful to hear Teresa!!
Thanks, you saved me 40 quid. Really appreciate the effort you put into this video.
+wrrabec no, thank you for being so kind!!!! Much appreciated :)
Just stretched my first canvas (24" x 36"). Followed your tutorial, and it came out flawless! Your explanation of corner folding was especially helpful. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, great video.
You’re most welcome. Thanks for the feedback
Excellent.
Thanks for the info! I'm making a bunch of acoustic panels for a vocal booth, and this saved me tons of time. They are coming out looking way cleaner than my first few attempts. No clickbait or needless "content", just pure information from the golden era of the internet, thanks!
Great to hear! Thanks for the feedback
My first attempt did not look anything like that, then I found your video, and now it does! Yaaay! Thanks for posting (despite hating these things lol) xx
Great job! Well done you!
Just starting to save some $$ by stretching my own canvas now...Thank you for this!! 👍👍👍
You are so welcome!
finally ! thanks so much for explaining the corner technique.
You're so welcome!
Good tutorial 💜
Thanks! It was a while ago though now - shot on a camcorder and mini discs!
Still helpful! Cheers!
Glad to hear it!
Great big thank you - clear instructions and no messing about
Thanks Dave; glad to help and appreciate your feedback! Thank you
Awesome...
Thanks 🤗
Extremely helpful, just finished making my first one and is good to know I did it correctly - thank you!
Great demonstration! You explained just what I needed to know perfectly!
Thankyou, very kind of you to say so :)
Great instructional video....I love how you showed the close up on the corners and demo twice. That was the hardest part for me.
Yeah mate, this really helped me put together a 48" x 18".. had no idea how to get the corners sorted, but you've made an excellent vid here! Thanks for posting this!
Much better than the last video. Thanks buddy! 🎉
Glad you liked it!
"You're not going to put that in, are ya"? too good... Thank you SO much, you have totally cleared up a couple of questions... DANG IT!!!! I was hoping you'd show the painting you were working on... cover me... i'm going into your site.. Cheers.
Sweet! Well done Sir...
🤩
Thanks!!
Awesome corner technique I just stretched my first canvas and this helped so much.great vid
Thanks for posting this, very helpful!
Great demonstration, I'm gonna give it a try!
Thanks for the helpful advice. I managed OK. It was rippled at first, but I sprayed the back with just water a few times and dry it, and this was sufficient to tighten up the canvas nicely. Phew!
Works for me and my work; looks great, stays tight and doesn't sag. Thanks for the observations...
Cool! Glad it helped you out!
Very good instructions and demonstration, thank you so much!
thanks so much. just did my first gallery wrap following your very clear instructions and it turned out great
you make it look so easy.
Perfect...thanks!!!
Very helpful! Thanks for posting.
My pleasure! :)
Mega thanks! I just stretched my first oil over my own hand made frame. I'd never even heard of this until I saw your video. I have to say, my first one looks darned professional! Thanks again!
Scott Anderson thanks Scott; very kind of you to say so. Much appreciated
your a top man so glad your a successful chap you would seem to be where you are because of hard work and talent rather than because you know the rite people lol ..
Amen to that! That is exactly the reason. I don't have luck or know people. Thanks for the comments.
It is actually making WANT to stretch canvas. Great edtucative video :)
Very helpful demonstration video. You are a Master.
Sometimes large, old, heavy canvases are difficult to mount and it is helpful to use canvass pliers. Also, I use a water spray bottle to mist the back of the canvas (especially around the perimeter) before I stretch in on the frame. The light water mist softens the canvass making it more pliable and easy to stretch. After the misted canvas is mounted on the frame, it dries and pulls tighter. R Martyn, Русский музей
Thank you very much for this video. You've just saved me a three week wait and a fair chunk of change over having it done at my local framer's. My left thumb is a little sore from keeping the tension on the canvas but it's a small price to pay. I'm so pleased!
Happy Days! Thank you s much and I'm glad it worked for you!!!!
Awesome video! Just finished stretching my first canvas! This video was very helpful and explained it perfectly!
+Amy Parker my pleasure Amy; thank you for commenting!
Nice work my friend. Will follow this when I mount my first canvas :D Thanks fella Brit :D
Very helpful thanks Mate.From the land down under Melbourne Australia.
Thanks Flomi - glad it was helpful to you! :0)
Hey Max - I like your tip with the water - I must try that sometime; thankyou so much for sharing! :)
Cool! Thankyou :)
Cheers Vinny :)
Just bought a couple of ready painted canvases from Bali. Your video has been a great help as I wanted a plain folded edge and not a conventional frame. When I looked at the demo ones in Bali they had 45 degree braces in each corner as well as a single crossbar. Thats how I'm going to do it. Thanks for the help especially on the start sequence and corners.
Denis - Folkestone.
This is very helpful...Thanks Man
great video! explained it very well
Looove it…And very funny at the end :) LOL
Thanks Renate; glad you enjoyed that bit!
Thank you so much for sharing.
My pleasure :)
Thanks dude; glad it could help you out... :)
Thanks Richard - my pleasure!
Thanks dude!
awesome! well done to you! Glad I could help.. :)
Yes indeed; I use the same technique for all stretching. Start with the centers and work your way out!Good luck...
Thank you for your advise, very good, special the corner!
+Sigrun Gunnarsdóttir you're welcome!
Thanks!
Thanks man, you've just saved me a lot of money :)
you're very welcome!!!
From the western highlands of Guatemala. Thanks much Mate. Really appreciated your pace and the help on the corners.
My pleasure! Glad it helped :)
@MsVeetamine thanks for that - I am so glad it made sense!
Pleasure - good luck with the first one!
With my latest painting I've decided to take it off its bars and stretch it on a smaller frame. Your video of you stretching a painted canvas was helpful and reassuring that I'm probably not going to damage the painting. Is there a risk of splitting the oil painting in the process, and if so, is there a way of avoiding it, and at the same time getting enough tension. Obviously with a painted canvas you can't rely on the gesso to add that extra bit of tension
Hi JJ. It's just personal preference. Most of what I do requires the canvas to be flat because of how viscose the paint is. If I have any kind of bow or sag the paint will run where i don't want it to go (if it stays flat) or it will run right down the canvas if i paint it upright. Hope that helps.
I see you are stapling at an angle -- that's the correct way to do it. I was stretching silkscreens starting in my teens in the 50s (yes, we used silk in those days) and I was told to staple at an angle to the edge of the frame.
John Bresnik phew! Thank heavens I’m doing it right then John! Appreciate your thoughts and feedback; thank you very much
Great vid, very helpful
You're welcome!
Great instructions! well done.
Thank you!
@misona70 yay! Thankyou! I'm glad you found it useful. Thanks for leaving such great feedback! :0)
Thankyou :)
thank you soooo much
Thank you
Thank you :o)
Hey! No idea - never done a curved one before. I guess you may need to make plenty of folds where the curves are greatest (angle depending). Smooth out creases with watered down PVA on the back. Hope that helps!
Very Nice presentation.....It helped me tremendously. Thank You ~
Thank you so much for the feedback.
nice corner technique, thank you. I found that my canvas was fairly loose though without using the pliers although having pulled the (nonsense) out of it. hahaha
Excellent! Thanks for the comment! :)
Superb example of how an instructional video should be done! Absolutely clear spoken instructions, perfect video, no unnecessary rambling or irrelevant talking; my personal gripe is with music playing along with the vocal, in my view it distracts and takes away from the clarity of your otherwise utterly professional video. If you don't already then I can tell you would make an excellent teacher/lecturer... If only all videos could be as perfect as yours! Thanks.
Peter Hoare thank you Peter for you valued feedback I am enormously grateful and encouraged by your kind words. Thank you again.
Tip: use wrinkle release spray for any wrinkles after you're done stretching the canvas!
Great video! Your like an English Steven Spielberg.
@MrTyrrell86 not sure how you would attach it without staples???
Excellent - clear - great close up - nice - thank you - the corners' s folding was my concern..
Thank you and you're welcome!
@IrisLavy Thankyou very much, glad it helped a little!
i paint acrylic, do you think that using a 'flow improver' or thinning with a little water would do anything to help prevent cracks (from stretching and un-stretching and re-stretching) ?
@psychodudu I believe I found the high-speed video first too... I'm building a video screen that will be hung like a large canvas in a frame and never done anything like this before. This video makes me feel much more comfortable about the process.
@TDeyelle you're very welcome Good luck with your creativity!!!
@MrGuitartramp thanks bud! That's an amazing compliment! :0)
Thanks for the comments! Much appreciated. There will always be a risk with any stretching as much depends on the weave density of the canvas and how forgiving it is when stretched. Cracks can occur - especially if paint is applied around the edges so be careful. As a tip you can stretch fairly tight (not too tight) then PVA the back as this will dry and stretch the weave from the reverse side. Water down by around 20%. A lot depends on your oil paints though... Hope that helps.
I showed your all videos so I need your contact number send me
I'm from srilanka
Great video dude. Can you do it with a good heavy-duty staple gun or does it have to be one of those industrial thingies that you have?
Thanks for the input. By the time I figure it out and do it, I should become an expert in it so if you ever have to do one, you know who to reach.
Hello , your work is incredible..
Which paints do you use …
Your latest paintings reflect light
Are they varnished or finished with resin
Hi Kavita - thank you for your kind feedback. The paintings are NOT varnished or have any coatings put on top of them - that finish is built into the paint at source. I use enamel paints made for me and you can learn more about them here: www.swarez.co.uk/using-enamel-paints/ - hope that helps!
This was explained really well, thank you! Have you ever had a problem whereby the paint cracks from the stretching?
Not yet! Glad you enjoyed the video!
Good video, do you use the same process for a smaller canvas? maybe 20'*24'?
Hi again. I also watched you stretch a much larger canvas. I'm guessing you build your canvas frames as well. Can you do a video on how you do that and what you consider for the center cross bars based on the size of the canvas? You may already have one. I appreciate all you are doing to advance the careers of us up-and-coming artists.
Hi Tara. I use a pre-manufactured bar system so the crossbar location is predetermined - depending on the combination of bars I use for any given size. As all bars are bought by size I have the flexibility to make hundreds of different combinations of sizes. They are a simply push fit design, that's all. Hope that helps.
@@SwarezArt sounds fantastic. I wish I could find something like that around here. I live in NYC.
Hi Tara, i was looking for stretchers and bars in NYC and came across a company called "frames and stretchers" in Manhattan, also SIMON LIU INC who are in Brooklyn, now i have no idea if they can provide what you need but they both appear to sell bars but i make it your choice to look or buy as i don't know them so cannot endorse them if you know what i mean, hope that helps 😊
@@SwarezArt thank you for such specific information and contacts. I will look into them as a possible resource. I’m thinking that I will probably build my frames myself after visiting the hardware store. This will be interesting as I am in a wheelchair but I don’t like to keep my limitation‘s from impacting my artistic growth. Thank you so much for your time and attention.
@@TaraSueSalusso You are welcome!
This is a great vid. I just watched one that was high-speed time-lapse and awful music ALL THE WAY THRU, and I nearly topped myself by the end. This is fab though.
Thanks
Rob FLA you’re welcome!!!
No worries Bagoona - hope you found it useful!
Mmmmm.. not sure without seeing it but excess is often caused by not trimming the canvas back enough and also not tucking it in enough - if that makes any sense? You can double fold what's left if need be and staple that too. Hope that helps?
Hi , great video thanks. Just wondering why you staple at an angle like that? I´ve been having trouble with a large painting I did on linen, not getting it as taut as I´d like. Thinking maybe I need to re-stretch and try putting the staples in angled instead of parallel with edge of canvas.
Jessica Dunn thanks for the feedback. The angle of the staple works across the grain of the timber frame so the staple sinks a little further into it. Staple vertically and you place the load on the bottom pin; staple horizontally and the pin load, although even across both pins, is loaded along the wood grain rather than across it. I've tried all variations and an angle is best for long term securing and tightness of the canvas. Hope that helps! Tightness can be adjusted with corner wedges if you have them supplied with the frame. Thanks. Ed.