Why Is Professional Picture Framing So Expensive? A Breakdown of Custom Frame Costs

26-04-2026

If you have just received your first quote for professional picture framing, you may have been surprised by the price. At a glance, it looks like „just a frame and a sheet of glass". In reality, the final cost reflects a whole system of materials, technologies and craftsmanship — all working toward one goal: to protect the artwork and keep it intact for decades. A custom picture frame is not cosmetic. It is an investment in the longevity of the work.

Below is a breakdown of every element that contributes to the cost — from the moulding itself, through glass, mat board and spacers, to the framer's hands.

What goes into a professional picture frame

A custom-made frame brings together eight elements working at once:

  • Frame moulding – the structural and decorative core.
  • Glass – a protective layer with the right level of filtering.
  • Mat board (passe-partout) – the cardboard between the artwork and the glass.
  • Spacers – physical separation between artwork and glass.
  • Backing – a rigid HDF/MDF board with acid-free protection.
  • Mounting materials – acid-free tapes, hangers, dust seals.
  • Finish – paint, gilding, lacquer.
  • The framer's work – measuring, cutting, joinery, quality control.

Individually, many of these are minor expenses. Together, they explain the difference between a ready-made frame from a chain store and a hand-built custom frame.

The frame – the foundation of every framing job

Every framing job starts with the moulding: the strip of wood that gets mitre-cut at the corners and assembled into a finished frame. The choice of moulding drives most of the cost — and most of the visual character of the result.

Even a small frame consumes several running metres of moulding, and the price grows with three variables: the width and depth of the profile, the quality of the wood, and the way the frame is finished.

New custom-made frames

The most common solution: a custom picture frame built from solid wood and matched to the work down to the millimetre. Profile choice ranges from slim, minimal lines to wide, sculpted edges. Deep frames suit canvases on stretcher bars and oil paintings; slim profiles work well with prints, photographs and works on paper.

Antique and vintage frames

An alternative path: antique or vintage frames. The process involves sourcing the right frame, adjusting it to size, cleaning, restoring and often adapting it to the specific work. These frames rarely fit perfectly off the shelf — adjustment requires experience and precision.

What they offer cannot be reproduced in new production: real patina, depth of material, history. That is why a good antique frame is rarely cheap.

Hand-gilded frames – traditional water gilding on bole

The premium segment: frames gilded with real gold leaf. A hand-made frame gilded with real gold leaf is built using traditional water gilding on a bole base. Gold leaves measuring roughly 80×80 mm are applied one by one — for narrower mouldings, the leaf is cut on a gilder's cushion with a specialised knife. It is precise hand work that cannot be automated.

Several leaf karats are available in this technique: 6K and 12K (white gold — cool, almost chrome-like), 22-karat moon gold (lighter, cooler, subtly silvery, distinctly paler than yellow gold), and 23-karat yellow gold (the warmest, deepest tone — a glow that does not fade with the years).

[IMAGE: artwork in a wide brown frame with a gilded inner edge, 22-karat moon gold leaf on red bole]
A wide brown frame with a hand-gilded inner edge. Real 22-karat moon gold leaf laid over a red bole base — under the subtle wear of the gold, the warm reddish ground shows through, giving the frame depth and an authentic patina.

Glass – the protection you don't see

Artworks survived for centuries without modern protective glass. UV-filtering options only appeared in the late 20th century. Today the choice of glass depends on the type of work and its value.

Standard glass

The most affordable option. Protects the work from dust and accidental damage. Suitable for posters, low-value prints and works that can be replaced or reproduced.

Conservation glass with UV filter

Slows pigment and paper fading. Recommended for originals, watercolours, prints and colour photographs — anywhere prolonged light exposure could damage the work over time.

Museum and anti-reflective glass

The most advanced option: anti-reflective glass virtually disappears in the frame, eliminates reflections and at the same time provides very high UV protection. Museum glass is the standard for valuable, signed and irreplaceable works. The cost is noticeably higher, but in practice it is an investment in protecting the artwork for decades.

Mat board, spacers and acid-free backing

Three elements the client rarely sees — and which decide what state the work will be in when it reaches the next generation.

Mat board (passe-partout) – function, not decoration

The mat around the artwork has three roles: it separates the work from the glass, creates an air gap, and improves the visual reading of the piece. A professional mat is acid-free — it does not degrade the paper and stabilises the conditions around the work. The cost grows with the number of layers (single, double, with additional decorative profile) and the material (standard, linen, silk).

Spacers – the gap that saves the work

Spacers create a physical separation between the glass and the artwork. Without that gap you risk moisture condensation, the work sticking to the glass, and surface transfer — irreversible damage. The customer rarely notices spacers, but they are fundamental to the longevity of the framing.

Backing – protection from behind

Behind the artwork sits a backing board: HDF or MDF for larger formats. Cheap framing relies on plain cardboard that contains acids — over time these migrate into the paper and cause yellowing and degradation. Professional framing uses archival, acid-free materials that stabilise the work and don't react chemically with paper.

Mounting hardware and the framer's hand

Every framing job also includes acid-free mounting tapes, reversible attachment systems, pressure components, dust seals on the back, and hanging hardware sized to the weight. Individually small items that, taken together, contribute a noticeable share of the final cost.

The most important element, however, is human work. Professional picture framing means precise measuring, mitre cutting, fitting, assembly and final inspection of every edge. It is not mass production — it is a hand-built process built on attention to detail and longevity.

And that is the real difference between a ready-made frame from a chain store and a custom job. A chain store sells a fixed-size product fitted „more or less". A custom frame is fitted to the millimetre, with materials chosen for the specific work in front of you.

Need a frame for your artwork?

I make custom picture frames by hand, in solid wood — from slim minimal profiles to wide hand-gilded frames using traditional water gilding on bole. Every piece is built for a specific work.

See picture frames →

How much does professional picture framing cost

The cost depends on several variables — the size of the work, the moulding profile, the frame finish, and the standard of glass and mat board. As a starting point, here are typical price brackets for the frame itself — without the glass and mat board, which are priced separately.

Frame-only prices (without glass and mat board) from my workshop:

  • Small frame, around 20×20 cm, painted, simple moulding, no gilding — from approx. EUR 150.
  • Medium frame, around 60×80 cm, moulding 5–8 cm wide, gilded with real gold leaf — up to approx. EUR 700.
  • Larger formats, wide or sculpted mouldings, advanced gilding techniques — individual quote.

On top of the frame comes the complete framing system: glass (standard, conservation with UV filter, or museum anti-reflective — meaningful jumps between levels), mat board (single, double, or with a decorative profile, in acid-free cotton, linen or silk), spacers, archival backing and mounting hardware.

I quote a precise figure for the complete framing once I have measured the work and we have agreed on the materials. There is no point in estimating blind — every element can shift the total significantly.

Personalisation – the choices you have when ordering with me

Every made-to-measure picture frame from my workshop is built around a specific work. These are the main areas where you can personalise the result.

Size and shape

The frame is cut to the exact dimensions of your artwork — whether it's an oil painting on a stretcher, a watercolour, a photograph, a poster or a printed canvas. I also build non-standard formats: round, oval and arched frames.

Moulding profile – from slim to wide

A full range of profiles is available, from slim, smooth lines to wide, sculpted edges. The width of the moulding is fixed for a given model — it is not adjusted during the order. The choice of profile decides whether the frame steps back and lets the work breathe, or builds a strong decorative presence around it.

Finish and colour

I work with a curated range of over a hundred high-pigment, craft-grade paints. Colour can be matched to your interior, to the tone of the artwork, or chosen for contrast. The finish always covers the front, the panel and the sides of the frame.

Hand gilding with real gold leaf

The frame can be hand-gilded with real gold leaf: 22-karat moon gold (cooler, lighter, subtly silvery) or 23-karat yellow gold (warmer, deepest glow that does not fade with the years). The traditional technique uses thin leaves laid on a bole base — the colour of the bole (most often red, ochre or black) shows subtly through the gold and reveals itself under gentle wear, giving the frame depth and authentic patina.

Glass and mat board

You can choose between standard glass, conservation glass with UV filter, and museum (anti-reflective) glass. The mat board is matched to the palette of the work — single or double, in different colours and materials (acid-free cotton, linen, silk).

Consultation and lead time

Details are agreed by email or phone before the order is placed. I can prepare a visualisation of the frame in a chosen colour and profile, and advise on the right glass and mat for the specific work. Lead time is set individually — hand-gilded frames need more days in the workshop than frames with a painted finish.

Order a custom picture frame

Professional picture framing is not the cost of a frame — it is a system of protection in which every element matters. If you want your work to reach the next generations in the same condition, it is worth investing in framing built around it.