Brian
spent a month in Morocco where he drove around in the sand, did not shower for
three weeks, and returned gifting me a seashell and a beautiful painting on
canvas. The painting wasn’t framed and I kept telling myself I would get to it
but was continually putting it off in dread of the very idea of entering a
craft framing store. Seven months later the Christmas festive atmosphere and
the bare walls of our new condo instilled in me the courage to face the
daunting world of a Roberts’ craft store.
I have always been unwilling to enter craft stores. Aside from slightly
traumatizing memories of being fawned over, cooed at, and showered with
stickers bearing images of barbies, flowers, and kittens in bows, I dislike
craft stores on the whole for the overwhelming amount of seemingly useless
materials that fill every reachable and unreachable corner of the shop and for
the chattering, sweet attendants who always seemed to flit around in them. As I
grew older, and thankfully grew out of the age where shop attendants felt it
appropriate to give me stickers in hopes that I would smile, I grew ever more
wary of crafts in general and craft stores in particular. However, having been
unable to think of any other way to get the painting framed, I conceded at last
to a friend’s suggestion to take it to a craft store where, she assured me,
they would easily be able to take care of anything I needed.
With my rolled up canvas tucked securely under my arm I marched into the craft
store at a firm brisk pace and brushed off one, two, yea even three sickeningly
sweet shop attendants who swarmed to assist me with any holiday needs I may or
may not have had. Relieved at having safely arrived at the framing desk at the
back of the store I began feeling even more confident at the sight of men
dressed in jeans and dirty t-shirts and untidy half pieces of various art
frames scattered behind the desk. I approached the counter where I was
delighted to be greeted with a short, simple, understandable “What do you need
today?”
I rolled out my precious bit of canvas and explained that I wanted it made
display-ready. The canvas needed to be affixed in some manner to a frame and
covered with glass within a nice frame, preferably one of a dark brownish hue
which I believed would accent the background blue nicely. The man stared at my
canvas and said nothing. This, I thought, is a vast improvement over chattering
with some loquacious but excessively nice person who will use seven hundred
fifty words to tell me that nothing can be done. I waited patiently for a
minute while I believed the man was giving my project some professional
musings. Sometimes my trust is entirely too easily earned.
The man finally opened his mouth and said, “So, you want this stretched?”
“Yes.”
“Like one of these?” He pointed to one of the popular bits of canvas that are
wrapped around a wooden frame so that the art bends around the frame itself but
has no covering or exterior
frame.
“No.” I explained again that I just wanted the art framed but that part of the
process would include attaching some sort of support to the canvas to keep it
taut.
“So, wait. You want it framed?”
“Yes.”
“Not stretched?”
“Well it needs to be both.” My faith in this deceptively direct request was
wavering.
“Both?”
“Yes.”
He stood up straight and quickly launched into an explanation of the stretching
process, how it was very popular to have a piece of canvas, like mine, wrapped
around a wooden frame so that the piece of art was either centered or wrapped
around the edges. He showed me how there was enough canvas available that I
could easily fit it to wooden frame like the one he magicked out from under the
counter.
I thought, hey! He’s kinda getting the idea. Now stick what you’ve just
described to me behind a piece of glass and inside a nice dark frame and tell
me how much to pay!
“So is that what you want? You want it stretched?”
“I need it framed.”
“Framed.”
“And stretched.”
“So, stretched?”
“And framed.”
“Just framed?”
“And stretched.”
“Not framed? Just stretched?”
Both. Both. For the love of all humanity BOTH!
We stood on either side of the counter staring at this impossible and
destined-to-be-unstretched-and-unframed view of a camel in a Moroccan scene. I
wished I was with the camel. I scooped up my canvas and left the store without
another word. As I drove down the street on my way back to my bare-walled
condo I saw a sign. Aspen Art and Frame. I braked so hard and turned so fast I
left skid marks in the road. I marched into the tiny shop and without greeting
laid down my bit of canvas and said, “Can you frame this?”
“Yes. We’ll need to stretch and frame it, though, to keep it nice. Ok?” I could
have kissed the dear girl. “Would you like to pick out a frame? Maybe something
dark to accent the color . . .”
Two weeks later I stood in my dining room admiring the beautiful painting. The
simple dark brown frame makes the skyline a deep, rich, glorious blue, and the
camel stands contently musing the idea of walking into my kitchen. The framing store even gave me a free hook with which to hang the completed masterpiece.
I have never since stepped foot in one of those craft stores with a framing department.
I love this one! :)
ReplyDeleteIt still makes me laugh so hard that he could not for the life of him grasp the idea that both actions needed to be applied to the same object. Both. Just. Both.
ReplyDelete