Paintings and Art Prints Add Refinement
To Your Home or Office!
The fastest way to
bring beauty and style to a room is to put up prints of
beautiful paintings. Here's what you should consider:
Painting Prints Price Range:
Expect to pay somewhere in the neighborhood of $50-$500
for an unframed print--anything less than $50 is likely
a poster. You should expect to pay a similar amount to have
the print framed--note that many prints are designed to
be exhibited without frames.
Before art prints were sold online, the only way to get
them was through galleries or museum shops, which had to
charge a large markup. Nowadays, art prints rarely cost
more than a few hundred dollars, and it is possible to find
good-quality prints for under $100. Still, those lower prices
generally come on prints that have been put on sale. Expect
to pay more for perennial favorites like Van Gogh's Starry
Night.
Selection
There is at least one print of every painting or photograph
on display in a museum anywhere. Thanks to the internet,
you can find the right art print among the tens of thousands
in existence and have it sent to you, regardless of where
the original is located. Since websites will let you browse
thumbnail images of the artwork, it's easy to find a particular
piece even if all you know about it is the name of the artist
or even just the time period in which it was created.
Painting Print Media
Prints are available in a variety of print stocks.
Prints vs. Original Paintings
If all you're interested in is a picture to decorate your
wall, rather than in collecting, prints are a better value
than original paintings. Here's why:
* Expense. Creating an original work of art generally takes
weeks. If you had to employ someone for several weeks or
several months, how much do you think it would cost at even
a modest salary? That's why original artwork generally costs
at least thousands of dollars. In order to have a real chance
of your work of art having investment value, you need to
buy the work of an artist who is moving up in the art market.
* Questionable investment value. Original artwork only has
investment value if the price goes up eventually. Very often,
the price does not. In short, if you're interested in investing,
buy stocks--it's a safer bet. Only buy art because *you*
value it.
* Knowledge. You need to be very knowledgeable about what
you are doing. Make no mistake: there's plenty of fraud
in this business. There is also plenty of wishful thinking
on the part of art dealers when it comes to a work's long-term
market prospects.
Ready to make your home more beautiful with prints of great
paintings? You're already in the right place:
the internet has numerous websites
offering an unbelievable array of art prints. Start looking
now. Joel Walsh has written a buying guide for art prints
at: http://www.a1-paintings.com
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