Vancouver Sun

Hanging art properly requires a bit of planning and skill

- MEGAN COLE

VICTORIA — How art and pictures are hung can change the way a space looks, but placing and hanging pieces properly requires a bit of skill.

Interior designer Shelley Kirsch says the most important step in putting up art in a home is to make sure it is at the right height.

“It’s a good idea if you are hanging a piece to get it so the centre of the picture is at eye level,” she says.

If a piece is hung too high, Kirsch says, it can be disorienti­ng to the viewer.

“You aren’t seeing it as a straighton image,” says the Toronto- based designer. “You are having to crane your neck. It takes away from what the image is when you’re looking at it from underneath.”

Before a homeowner puts the art on the wall, Kirsch recommends looking at how the surroundin­g lighting will shine on the piece. “Make sure when you are hanging your art, the lighting that is shining on the piece isn’t bisecting or trisecting it,” she says.

“You have to be conscious about how light is reflecting in the area where the piece is being hung. What you want to do is try and get an even arch. If you are dealing with pot lights like most people are, you want to make sure the whole image is being washed, not just a portion of it.”

When it comes to making sure your painting is straight, Jenny Martin recommends using two hooks to make sure the piece doesn’t slump.

“You can use a level to help make sure the piece is straight, and there are specific tools on the market to help hang art, but I don’t know if they are that great,” says the Victoria interior designer. “If you are using a wire on the back of a piece of art, that leaves more room for it to swing and move around, which is why I recommend using two fixed hooks.”

Instead of the traditiona­l look of photos centred in a linear configurat­ion on the wall, many homeowners are choosing to group multiple pieces together to create a collage- type feature. Martin says homeowners should take time to map out the grouping they are going for before they start putting nails in the wall, and to pick a common theme among the pieces.

“If you keep one element constant throughout the grouping it creates a great effect,” she says. “You could have a whole bunch of coloured frames, but all the prints are black and white, or you could have frames that are the same colour, but are different profiles, sizes and mouldings.”

While the most common way to put a piece up on a wall is with a hammer and hook, Martin says there are many other products such as gallery- style tracks, which allow homeowners more flexibilit­y with changing pieces.

“There are other hanging systems that don’t make marks on the wall that are adjustable,” Martin says. “Easels can be fun as well, making larger pieces a sculptural element.

 ??  ?? Interior designer Shelley Kirsch suggests hanging art at eye level and seeing how light will shine on it.
Interior designer Shelley Kirsch suggests hanging art at eye level and seeing how light will shine on it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada