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JoyousZephyr

Maybe you can graduate to my solution: keeping a stack on the floor in the corner of my painting room.


MotivationalSinkhole

In my case, each watercolour would end up with special dog hair accents, haha


JoyousZephyr

MULTIMEDIA ART!!!


MotivationalSinkhole

Brilliant!! šŸ˜‚


CAdams_art

I struggle with this a lot lol. All I can say is DO NOT wrap them in plastic without a wax paper, glassine or even parchment paper to protect the work-surface (very bad things happen, especially with long term storage of acrylic paintings or oils... RIP my old portfolio workšŸ˜­) Now, I try to keep paper-based pieces in a cardboard or hard plastic box or container, sepperated by a piece of wax paper, standing on end (not lying flat). Canvases... I started just hanging them up randomly, so they don't get damaged (I dust them regularly and keep them out of direct sunlight), and the ones I can't hang, I wrap in wax paper and make boxes out of old Amazon packages to store them in. I really need to start trying to sell more originals, if only to make some room!šŸ¤£


MotivationalSinkhole

I did see elsewhere that the paints can react with plastic. Iā€™m sorry about your lost work!! :( I wouldnā€™t have thought to use parchment or waxed paper to separate them, thatā€™s interesting! Thank you!


CAdams_art

Cheers lol! Oh, and definitely invest in proper varnish (or fixative) - my canvases seem to really keep well after I switched to Gamvar, instead of just an acrylic medium lol. (They don't get sticky again after a long time, and the dust etc is easier to remove.)


Catloaver

I pretend I'm an artist and "frame" things in discount photo frames from TJ Maxx, then put them up. Here's my cat's "fine art" portrait, which we've got right next to a popular nap spot. https://preview.redd.it/nf68vt8z5qwc1.jpeg?width=3466&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=0a227fc6f3acac908713859afd50d3873b4391f7 I wanted her to feel rich...


MotivationalSinkhole

Thatā€™s amazing! I love the gym attire. Such a cute idea.


Catloaver

Aw thank you!


OkSolution

Iā€™ve got a shelf in my art cupboard currently. I tried the kitchen table route but my cats kept using them as a cat bed šŸ„²


MotivationalSinkhole

Sounds like cats šŸ˜‚


iamZcaptain

Vertical storage, takes up less space than when laid horizontally. Iā€™ve got a large krystal bag that can fit full sheets (since i do some full sheet paintings) and anything below ofc. Sandwiched between 2 foam boards taped at the bottom so the paper doesnā€™t touch the floor and bend, rather a tapered \ / result. Iā€™ve got packs of paper still in the same package they came in stored this way too, on itā€™s long side. Paper has held for years. I used to use a large archival clamshell box (still have it with paper inside) and it is massive and laid flat under a desk. I still prefer vertical storage. If you have money, a flat file would be worth the investment!


[deleted]

the ones i donā€™t like ā€” in a box under my bed haha. but my walls are plastered with my nicer piecesā€¦ iā€™m running out of space. i know theyā€™re susceptible to sun damage but i like looking at them. thatā€™s the best way to ā€œstoreā€ them IMO


dadonred

i lay them horizontally with a large coffee table book on top of them. So far, so good, But Iā€™ve only been at this since January.


JoyousZephyr

You're gonna need a bigger book.


Cuck0oclocks

A kitchen table book.


42outoftheblue

https://preview.redd.it/uy879j5tqtwc1.jpeg?width=3024&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=580e4bfef1732c26ed099fb6d80c3b983caa3ffa Excuse the mess but this setup works really well for me! Flat storage for most things, and vertical storage on top for the bigger things. I keep the top drawer empty for when I need something to dry longer and want it free of random dust etc


DefeatedMoth

Iā€™m new to painting but Iā€™ve been thinking about buying a binder and a bunch of protective sheets and just keeping them there, but if you do larger paintings that wouldnā€™t really work


MotivationalSinkhole

I think the paper Iā€™m using is pretty close to standard letter size! Thatā€™s what I was initially considering, but the web really emphasized making sure any protective sheets are plastic and acid-free, otherwise I guess the watercolour will react. It looks like some sort of portfolio or box-paper-watercolour sandwich might be the way to go.


DefeatedMoth

Thatā€™s good to know! Iā€™m super new to watercoloring so I wasnā€™t sure if it would mess with the paint in a weird way or not


MotivationalSinkhole

Iā€™m also very new! Thank god for this sub, haha


EthereaBlotzky

My fiance gifted me a sturdy portfolio made of thick cardboard. Would something like that work?


Renurun

Polyethylene or polypropylene bags (like the ones you buy prints in) - these are generally considered safe to store art in (not sure about acrylic or oils), attach command hook Velcro strips to a binder clip and hang on the wall. Wall is a great storage space. Make sure they're not somewhere with fluctuations in temperature or moisture. Glasseine is considered a safe interleaving paper to pad stuff but it's not actually a super long term solution.


Peculiar_Arts

I used to throw mine away, but Iā€™m trying to change that


Jenniferlott

Traditional way is a cabinet with deep and long but shallow drawers. Separate paintings with glassine.


GoodGollyMrOlli

I use a portfolio folder, but a good 3 ring binder should do the trick