Custom Framing & Printing Forum
5 Ways Large Format Retail & Hospitality Printing Elevates Displays
In forty years of producing flagship work out of our Chelsea, Hillside, and Miami studios, we've learned that retail and hospitality share the same problem: the first five seconds. A shopper steps off the sidewalk, a guest walks through the porte-cochère, and the brand either lands or it doesn't. What lands is almost always scale — handled properly. Large format printing is how the best luxury retailers and hotels own those five seconds. It's the medium behind the windows, the walls, the columns, and the lobbies that people remember. The ones that don't land usually aren't failing because of the idea. They're failing because somewhere between the brief and the wall, the production broke down. Here's how we see the work — five ways we've watched luxury retail and hospitality brands use large format printing to elevate their spaces, drawn from the floors we've actually produced it on. We serve luxury brand teams across every market we operate in, and the lessons below are the ones that keep coming back. Key Takeaways The window and the lobby entry are the same surface — treat them as one. Luxury brand walls need to be produced like art, not like signage. The finish is the signal. Multi-location rollouts live or die on production discipline, not printing technology. One partner from file to wall beats six vendors every time — especially on launch calendars. 1. The Window & Lobby Entry Are One Surface Most retail teams still think of the storefront as signage and the lobby entry as architecture. They're the same surface. Both are the first impression a brand gets to make, and both respond to the same treatment: floor-to-ceiling print, handled like a theatrical set. The brands we produce for have mostly stopped treating window vinyls as a seasonal afterthought. A flagship window runs on a six-week cadence now — new imagery, new tension fabric, new backlit panels. A hotel porte-cochère wrap does the same job for a property that needs to be legible at forty yards in the rain. The materials are different — cast vinyl versus backlit fabric — but the thinking is the same: the outside surface is advertising space the brand already owns, and nobody else can buy it. We've produced semi-transparent perforated windows that let daylight into the store while turning the glass into a billboard, and we've printed tension fabric systems that let a brand team change a storefront's entire façade overnight. Both count as window work, and both do more for foot traffic than most brand teams give them credit for. 2. Brand Walls Should Be Produced Like Art, Not Signage The single biggest mistake we see in luxury retail and hospitality is a brand wall that's been produced to signage spec instead of art spec. A hotel lobby mural that reads as "print" from ten feet away tells a guest everything about how the brand sees itself. The ones that read as "art" do something else entirely. The difference sits in the production stack. An art-grade wall means proper substrate (Dibond, Plexi face-mount, or museum-grade tension fabric), a color profile matched to a master proof, and a finish that doesn't go chalky under store lighting two months in. It also usually means the imagery gets framed and mounted the way a gallery piece would — our custom framing side of the house handles the oversized work that needs to live on a wall for a decade rather than a quarter. When we produced brand photography for Louis Vuitton installations, we approached every piece the way we'd approach a museum-bound print. That standard isn't optional at the top end of luxury. The moment a guest can tell a lobby wall is "just print," the brand has already lost the room. The other thing we've learned: the opportunities most brands overlook aren't the obvious walls. They're the columns, the soffits, the fixtures, and the ceilings. Print where nobody prints. That's where luxury brands build rooms people actually remember. 3. Launches & Activations Belong to the Print Partner A product launch or a hotel activation is the clearest test of a production partner. The calendar is fixed, the scope keeps moving, and the brand team can't afford for any part of the stack to miss its window. We've run a lot of these. The pattern we see over and over: the launches that feel like events have one production partner doing everything, and the ones that feel like displays have six. When we produced flagship launch moments for Tommy Hilfiger, the brand's team didn't need to manage nine vendors — they needed one team that could print, mount, ship, and install on a timeline the launch couldn't flex. That's not a scheduling preference. That's the actual difference between a launch that lives on Instagram and one that doesn't. Activation work also lives or dies on material choice. Tension fabric because it goes up in hours without scaffold. Backlit because the activation runs into the evening. Mounted prints because the installation is going to live past the launch and move to a permanent wall afterward. The material decisions are the brand decisions. A good print partner makes them before the brief lands. 4. Multi-Location Rollouts Are a Production-Discipline Problem Most of the failures we see on luxury rollouts aren't printing failures. They're discipline failures — color management that wasn't held tight across print runs weeks apart, substrate consistency that drifted between vendors in different cities, a proof that got signed off in one market and ignored in another. Version drift is the silent killer of a multi-location luxury program. The fix is boring and expensive, which is why most programs don't get it right. It means running every job against a master proof. It means holding substrate specs exactly — not the closest thing a regional printer happens to have in stock. It means shipping finished work out of studios positioned in the markets that matter, rather than trucking it across three states. That's why we built our studios in Chelsea, Hillside, and Miami where the luxury work actually happens. A flagship rollout across New York, New Jersey, and Florida shouldn't be a logistics problem. It should be a production problem — which is a problem we already know how to solve. The question we wish more brand teams would ask a print partner isn't "can you produce this?" It's "can you produce it identically eighteen months from now, after four software updates and a substrate reformulation?" That's the real test, and most vendors can't answer it. 5. One Partner From File to Wall The last thing — and the one we care about most — is consolidation. We've watched luxury brand teams juggle six vendors for one flagship install. Print from one. Mount from another. Crate from a third. Freight from a fourth. Install from a fifth. Post-install pack-out from a sixth. It doesn't work. The handoffs are where the project dies. The production stack that actually works for flagship retail and hospitality is one partner handling substrate selection, print, mount, crate, ship, install, and pack-out under one project manager and one timeline. Our full production stack was built exactly this way — custom framing, fine art printing, mounting and lamination, and on-site installation all produced under one roof, by one team, on one invoice. $9.11B in 2023 to $12.70B by 2030, and the growth isn't in hardware, it's in the production services surrounding the press (Grand View Research, 2024). But we didn't need a research report to tell us that. We've been running the integrated stack since 1983, because it was the only way to do flagship work properly even then. If you're briefing a flagship rollout or a hotel activation for the back half of 2026, we'd love to hear about what you're working on. The earlier the conversation starts, the more the production stack can do for the final wall. What Actually Separates Luxury Large Format The short answer: the willingness to say no. Luxury-grade production means choosing a ten-year substrate for the install that's going to live on a flagship façade, and the discipline to refuse a calendered vinyl that won't hold up past two years. It means matching material life to install length, running every job against a master proof, and treating finish as a brand question rather than a specification. The rest is execution. And execution is the part we've been doing for forty years. Frequently Asked Questions What is large format printing for retail and hospitality displays? Large format printing covers anything produced above roughly 24 inches wide — window vinyls, tension fabric walls, backlit films, Dibond panels, Plexi face mounts, and oversized framed photography. For retail and hospitality, it's the production method behind flagship windows, hotel lobby walls, column wraps, event activations, and architectural brand graphics. At the luxury end, the best work is framed and mounted the way a gallery piece would be. Which substrates last longest in retail and hotel spaces? Cast vinyls and premium wrap films outlast calendered vinyls by a factor of three to five in vertical commercial installs. For permanent hotel lobby graphics and long-term flagship walls, mounted prints, tension fabric, and cast films are the defaults. Calendered vinyl is only acceptable when the program length matches the material life — which for most luxury work, it doesn't. How far in advance should a flagship or hotel brief a print partner? Four to six weeks is comfortable for a single-site flagship install. For a multi-location rollout across ten or more doors, eight to twelve weeks gives the production team the runway for proofing, color management, and coordinated install windows. Launches compress this — which is exactly why having a single production partner matters. Decisions that take a week in a vendor chain take a day in a single-team setup. Can one partner handle rollouts across multiple cities? Yes — and it's increasingly the standard for serious luxury brands. A production partner with studios in multiple markets can produce locally, install locally, and still hold one master proof and one project manager for the entire program. The alternative — six regional vendors — is where version drift starts and where most rollout failures come from. What separates luxury-grade production from standard large format? Three things: substrate selection, color management discipline, and the willingness to refuse a material that won't hold up. Luxury-grade production matches material life to install length, runs every job against a master proof, and treats finish as a brand question rather than a specification. The rest is execution. Scale Is a Format, Not a Flex The retail and hospitality brands winning the first five seconds aren't doing it with cleverness. They're doing it with scale, treated properly. Window vinyls, lobby walls, column wraps, rollout-grade reproduction — none of these are the point. The point is the brand environment they build together. We've produced the work that lives on flagship walls and hotel lobbies for forty years. Ready to elevate your retail or hospitality space? Skyframe produces large format graphics, custom framing, and white-glove installation for flagship stores and hotels across NYC, NJ, and Miami — all in-house. Get a Quote
Learn moreInterior Designer Trade Services: A Complete Guide to Custom Framing, Printing, and Installation Partnerships
Key Takeaways Interior designer trade services cover the full production lifecycle — custom framing, fine art printing, fabrication, delivery, and white-glove installation — through a single partner with dedicated account support. Trade pricing typically reflects volume and project-based relationships rather than retail markups, with material costs and labor quoted transparently per project. The best trade partners offer thousands of framing combinations across wood, metal, acrylic, and specialty finishes like gold leaf and color-matched lacquer. A full-service partner replaces three to five separate vendors — framer, printer, crater, shipper, installer — with one point of contact and one invoice. What Are Interior Designer Trade Services? Interior designer trade services are production and fulfillment services offered specifically to design professionals — encompassing custom framing, fine art printing, fabrication, delivery, and installation — typically at preferential pricing with a dedicated account representative. A full-service trade partner handles the entire arc from specification to final installation, which is what separates a trade services provider from a retail frame shop. For residential and commercial designers, the trade services relationship is fundamentally different from walk-in consumer framing. Projects are treated as coordinated production runs, not one-off orders. The partner understands that a designer's timeline, client expectations, and specification requirements are non-negotiable — and builds their workflow around that reality. Skyframe has operated as an interior designer trade services partner across New York, New Jersey, and Miami for over four decades, working with design firms on everything from single statement pieces to full-property buildouts. What Services Are Typically Included in a Trade Partnership? A complete interior designer trade services partnership includes seven core capabilities, delivered under one roof with a single point of contact. This consolidation is the primary reason designers move away from managing multiple vendors — the coordination cost of juggling a framer, printer, crater, shipper, and installer separately often exceeds the price difference between vendors. The standard trade services suite includes: Service What It Covers Custom Framing Handcrafted frames in wood, metal, acrylic, and specialty finishes, built to spec Fine Art Printing Museum-quality giclée printing on archival paper, canvas, and photographic substrates Fabrication Custom builds using CNC routing, plexi, composites, and metal — for displays, cases, and signage Mounting & Lamination Face-mounts, substrate mounting, and protective lamination for prints Crating & Packaging Museum-grade crating for shipping, storage, and transport Delivery White-glove delivery scheduled to the designer's installation window Installation On-site hanging, mounting, and final placement by trained installers Galleries, hospitality groups, and luxury retailers use the same service structure — which is why a designer's trade partner is often already working at the same standard used by institutional clients. How Does Trade Pricing Actually Work? Trade pricing for interior designer services reflects preferential rates applied to material costs and labor, structured as an ongoing relationship rather than a one-time discount. Unlike retail framing, which marks up heavily to cover walk-in overhead and one-off transactions, trade services are quoted closer to production cost with a margin appropriate for the volume and continuity of the relationship. In practice, trade pricing typically applies to three cost categories: material costs (moulding, glass, substrates, ink), labor (framing, mounting, printing, installation), and logistics (delivery, crating, installation visits). A designer working with a full-service partner receives itemized quotes for each project, with trade rates applied uniformly across the work. No reputable trade services provider publishes a flat discount percentage publicly — pricing depends on project scope, material selection, and production complexity. The advantage of the trade relationship is consistency: the same rates apply to a single frame as to a 50-piece hotel installation. What Material and Finish Options Should Designers Expect? A serious trade services partner offers thousands of framing and printing combinations across four primary material categories: wood, metal, acrylic, and composite. Within those categories, finish options range from natural and stained wood to high-gloss lacquer, brushed metals, gold leaf, and custom color-matched finishes for specification to a client's interior palette. Specialty finishes that a typical retail framer cannot produce include: Gold and silver leaf — hand-applied metal leaf, available in 22K, 18K, and composition varieties Custom color-matched lacquer — matched to paint codes, fabric swatches, or Pantone references Hand-finished wood — gessoed, distressed, ebonized, or limed surfaces Architectural acrylic — colored, frosted, and UV-protective variants for light-sensitive work Metal welding and patination — custom fabricated frames in steel, brass, and bronze For printing, designers should expect access to fine art papers (Hahnemühle, Canson, Epson), canvas, photographic media, and substrate mounting options. Museum-grade archival inks and UV-protective glazing are standard at this tier of service. How Long Does a Typical Design Project Take? Timeline for a trade services project depends on material availability, frame build complexity, and installation scheduling — but most residential projects complete within two to four weeks from approval, and commercial installations of 20 to 50 pieces typically run four to six weeks. Rush timelines exist for designers facing photo shoots, client walkthroughs, or installation deadlines, though rush work is priced separately. The standard production sequence runs: Specification & quoting (1–3 days) — material selection, size confirmation, quote approval Production (10–15 business days) — framing build, printing, mounting, finishing Quality inspection (1 day) — final review before delivery Delivery scheduling (flexible) — coordinated with the designer's install window Installation (1 day per site for most projects) — on-site hanging and placement A reliable trade partner communicates timeline proactively. The biggest source of timeline delays in framing and printing is specification ambiguity — incomplete sizing, missing finish selections, or late client approvals. Partners who build in a specification review step up front prevent most of these delays. What's Included in White-Glove Delivery and Installation? White-glove delivery and installation for interior designers includes protected transport in climate-controlled vehicles, on-site unpacking, placement per the designer's specifications, and removal of all packaging materials before leaving the site. This is the service tier that separates a trade partner from a standard framer who drops off boxes at the door. For residential installations, the crew arrives at a scheduled window, lays down floor protection, unpacks each piece on-site, and hangs or mounts each item according to the designer's layout drawings. Precision hardware — French cleats, security mounts, floating pins, and toggle bolts — is selected based on wall substrate and artwork weight. For commercial installations, the team often works after hours or during store-closed windows to avoid disrupting operations. Crating and packaging for long-haul delivery uses museum-grade materials: acid-free wrapping, custom-built crates, and climate-control when required. Skyframe's installation teams work across NYC, New Jersey, Miami, and the surrounding metropolitan areas, and ship globally through an in-house logistics network. Where Does Skyframe Serve Interior Designers? Skyframe serves interior designers across three primary markets — New York City, New Jersey, and Miami — with in-house production facilities in each region and a global shipping network that reaches design firms nationally and internationally. Each location operates with the same materials, the same standards, and the same dedicated account management model, so designers working across multiple markets see consistent quality and timelines. Primary service areas include: New York City — Chelsea showroom and production at 141 W 28th Street, serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the broader NYC metro New Jersey — Hillside production facility at 28 Evans Terminal Road, serving Northern and Central NJ design firms with 15-minute access from the Holland Tunnel Miami — Wynwood Arts District location at 1918 NW 21st Street, serving Miami-Dade, Coral Gables, Design District, and South Florida designers National and international delivery — crating, shipping, and installation coordination for out-of-market projects through partner installer networks For the full list of neighborhoods, cities, and regions Skyframe services, see the Areas We Serve page. How Should Designers Evaluate a Trade Services Partner? Designers evaluating a new trade services partner should look for four qualifiers: proven institutional client experience, full in-house production (not subcontracted), dedicated account management, and transparent trade pricing. A partner that meets all four tends to deliver consistently across project types and scales with the designer's practice over time. Critical questions to ask during evaluation: Who are your current gallery and design firm clients? Named references from peers carry more weight than case studies. Is production in-house or subcontracted? Subcontracted framing and printing introduces quality variance and timeline risk. Who will be my day-to-day contact? Dedicated account reps catch details that ticketing systems miss. How are rush timelines handled? Every designer will need a rush at some point — know the policy in advance. Can you produce a sample or prototype? Complimentary samples are the lowest-cost way to verify quality before committing a full project. The best signal of trade partner quality is longevity of client relationships. A partner with ten-plus year relationships with working design firms is producing consistent enough work to earn renewal, year after year. Frequently Asked Questions How is trade pricing different from retail framing prices? Trade pricing reflects preferential rates on materials and labor for ongoing design professional relationships. Retail framing includes retail markup, walk-in overhead, and one-off transaction costs. A designer working with a trade partner typically sees itemized quotes at production-cost rates with a margin aligned to volume and continuity — not a fixed discount percentage. Do trade services partners work with out-of-state or international designers? Yes. Established trade partners with in-house logistics networks ship globally — Skyframe, for example, ships from production facilities in New York, New Jersey, Miami, and international locations in Dongguan and Porto. Crating and climate-controlled shipping are standard for high-value or sensitive pieces. See the full list of areas Skyframe serves for a breakdown by region. Can designers get samples before committing to a project? Most full-service trade partners provide complimentary samples or small-scale prototypes for specification and client approval. This is standard practice — samples protect both the designer and the partner from specification misunderstandings and let the end client see the material before production begins. What happens if a piece is damaged in transit or installation? Reputable trade partners carry insurance for works in transit and installation, and their contracts specify liability and replacement terms clearly. For high-value pieces, designers should confirm insurance coverage and replacement timelines before shipment — this is a standard part of the intake process. How do designers get set up with a trade services account? Setup typically requires a brief consultation to confirm the designer's business, project profile, and ongoing needs. Most trade partners have a dedicated contact form or intake call for new designer accounts. Expect to share examples of current projects and discuss the kinds of services the designer uses most frequently. Why the Right Trade Partnership Matters The difference between a good designer project and a great one is often invisible to the client but obvious to the designer: the framing sits flush, the prints color-match the specified artwork, the installation goes in on schedule without a single follow-up visit. These details come from a partner that understands the designer's work — not a vendor processing another order. Interior designer trade services, done right, reduce the vendor management burden from five or six contacts down to one. They replace retail markups with production-cost pricing. They give designers access to fabrication and finishes that retail framers simply don't offer. And they handle the parts of the job — crating, shipping, installation — that are most likely to go wrong when managed across multiple providers. For design firms producing at any meaningful volume, the right trade partner is infrastructure, not a line item. Ready to work with a true trade partner? Skyframe offers interior designer trade services across NYC, NJ, and Miami — custom framing, fine art printing, fabrication, delivery, and white-glove installation, all in-house. New trade accounts receive 15% off their first order. Get a Quote
Learn more
Custom Framing Resources
Professional Art Delivery & Installation in NYC
Skyframe has offered fully in-house, white-glove art delivery and professional installation since 1983 — serving NYC, New Jersey, Long Island, The Hamptons, Connecticut, and Miami. One team, fully insured, from the production floor to the finished wall.
Learn moreThe Best Paper and Substrate Options for Fine Art Reproduction
Before we cut a single print, we ask one question on the bench: what is this piece meant to outlive? Forty years of fine art production have taught us that the substrate is the quiet decision every other call rides on. Here are the five families we actually work with — and how we pick.
Learn moreWhat Interior Designers Need to Know About Custom Print Finishes
The finish is where most design projects either land or miss. Here's what we've learned in forty years of printing for interior designers — from matte cotton rag to metallic paper — and why proofing against the actual frame matters more than any screen proof ever will.
Learn more
Art Installations
Your Guide to NYC Art Week May 2026: 6 Fairs, One Week, Where to Go
6 fairs open across Manhattan between May 13 and May 19. A practical NYC art week guide to where to go, what to see, and how to plan your week. If You're Exhibiting Skyframe has been New York's framer for the trade since 1983, supporting galleries and exhibitors throughout NYC art week. From our Chelsea showroom, we are three blocks from Future Fair and four from The Shed. We handle custom framing, fine art printing, Plexi Mounting, and HD metal prints. We serve exhibitors at every fair on this list. Delivery to your booth and white-glove on-site installation are included. Schedule a Consultation → Request a Quote → View Our Work → 6 Fairs, One Week, Where to Go For one week in May, New York becomes the center of the art world. Between May 13 and May 19, seven major fairs open their doors across Manhattan. They range from emerging contemporary at the Starrett-Lehigh Building to museum-grade masterworks at the Park Avenue Armory. From our Chelsea showroom, we are three blocks from Future Fair and four from The Shed. We've been framing and printing for exhibitors at fairs like these since 1983. Here's our guide to where to go, what to see, and how to plan your week. The Fairs, in Order of Opening 1. Frieze New York: May 13–17 The Shed545 W 30th St, New York, NY 10001, USA Photo by Frieze New York Website The anchor of the week. Frieze brings together leading galleries from New York and around the world. Exhibitors present solo, dual, and themed shows across two floors of The Shed in Hudson Yards. The Focus section, curated this year by Lumi Tan, highlights emerging galleries through solo shows. It is historically one of the most rewarding sections to walk slowly. Insider note: Tuesday's invitation-only preview is the best day to see the work before it sells. Public hours open on Thursday. The Shed's location puts you a fifteen-minute walk from Future Fair and NADA — worth chaining together. Frieze New York→ 2. Future Fair: May 13–16 Chelsea Industrial 535 West 28th Street, New York, NY 10001, Photo by Future Fair Website Now in its sixth year, Future Fair has a reputation as the most collaborative of the week's fairs. Galleries share booth space, programming runs late, and the work skews toward emerging and mid-career artists. The Chelsea Industrial venue keeps everything compact and walkable. Insider note: The fair closes Saturday, a full day before the rest. If you're prioritizing, see Future Fair first. Future Fairs → 3. NADA New York: May 13–17 The Starrett-Lehigh Building601 W 26th Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10001 Photo by NADA website The 12th edition of NADA returns to Starrett-Lehigh with 121 galleries from 15 countries. The roster includes 45 NADA members and 53 first-time exhibitors. NADA is the discovery fair. Lower booth fees mean younger galleries, smaller editions, and prices that often start in three figures. They usually start in three figures rather than six. Insider note: Go on Saturday or Sunday when the gallerists have time to talk. The TD Bank Curated Spotlight, organized this year by Anthony Elms, is worth seeking out first. New Art Dealers → 4. Independent New York: May 14–17 Pier 36299 South Street, New York, 10002 Photo by Independent Website Independent has always been the most curated of the major fairs. Exhibitors are selected rather than juried, and the layout favors solo and two-person presentations. It avoids standard booths. Pier 36's open floor plan gives the work room to breathe. It is worth the trip downtown. Insider note: The light at Pier 36 in late afternoon is some of the best this week. It is among the best you'll see at any fair. Independent Art Fair → 5. TEFAF New York: May 15–19 Park Avenue Armory643 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10065 Photo by TEFAF website The week's most rigorous fair. TEFAF's vetting committee inspects every work before the doors open, which keeps the bar high. Cycladic antiquities might sit just two booths from a de Kooning. The 2026 edition welcomes back Hauser & Wirth, Pace, Lévy Gorvy Dayan, and Berggruen. It also includes nine first-time exhibitors, including Galerie Lelong. Insider note: TEFAF is the only fair the Armory permits to activate the upstairs period rooms. These Gilded Age interiors are worth the visit alone. tefaf.com → 6. The American Art Fair: May 16–19 Bohemian National Hall321 East 73rd Street, NYC Photo by The American Art Fair website The week's specialist fair. American Art Fair celebrates its 19th edition with 18 dealers focused exclusively on American 19th- and 20th-century art. Expect names like Sargent, Henri, Chase, and Hartley. The Bohemian National Hall on the Upper East Side keeps the atmosphere intimate. It feels closer to a curated exhibition than a fair. Insider note: The lectures program, free with admission, is a serious draw. If you collect American art seriously, plan a Saturday or Sunday afternoon around the talks. The American Art Fair → Planning Your Week by Neighborhood West Chelsea cluster (Wed–Sun): Frieze, Future Fair, NADA, 1-54 — all within a fifteen-minute walk of each other. A single day covers four fairs. West Chelsea cluster (Wed–Sun): Upper East Side (Fri–Tue): TEFAF at the Park Avenue Armory. Then The American Art Fair at Bohemian National Hall, twenty blocks north. Best paired with auction previews at Sotheby's, Christie's, and Phillips. Lower Manhattan (Thu–Sun): Independent at Pier 36. The downtown outlier, but worth the trip — and an easy combination with the Lower East Side gallery district. See you on the floor. Skyframe Chelsea, NYC · Hillside, NJ · Miami, FL
Learn more7 Ways NYC Art Galleries Prepare Exhibitions & Installations
NYC art galleries operate in one of the most competitive exhibition environments in the world, where presentation, protection, and precision are essential. Behind every successful exhibition is a detailed preparation process—one that ensures artwork is protected, displayed correctly, and installed with precision. Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at how NYC galleries prepare artwork for exhibitions and installations. 1. Artwork Assessment & Planning Before any framing or printing begins, galleries start with a detailed evaluation of each piece: Medium (photography, painting, mixed media, sculpture) Size and weight Fragility and conservation needs Display environment (lighting, wall type, traffic flow) This step determines everything that follows—from framing materials to installation hardware. 2. Selecting the Right Framing & Materials Framing for exhibitions isn’t just aesthetic—it’s functional and archival. NYC galleries typically prioritize: Museum-quality frames that complement the artwork without distracting from it Archival matting and backing to protect pieces long-term UV-protective glazing to reduce light damage Custom frame profiles for non-standard or oversized works Consistency is also key. Exhibitions often require multiple pieces to feel cohesive across an entire space. 3. Professional Printing for Exhibitions For photography and digital artwork, print quality is non-negotiable. Galleries focus on: High-resolution, color-accurate printing Fine art and photographic papers are suited to the work Consistent output across editions or series Large-format capabilities for statement pieces Proper printing ensures that what viewers see on the wall matches the artist’s original vision. 4. Crating, Transport & Handling Once artwork is ready, logistics become critical—especially in NYC. Professional preparation includes: Custom crating or protective packaging Safe transport through city streets and freight elevators Careful handling during load-in and load-out Coordination with building requirements and schedules This step minimizes risk and keeps exhibitions on time. 5. White-Glove Installation Installation is where preparation meets execution. Experienced installers handle: Accurate measuring and layout Level, secure mounting Specialized hardware for heavy or oversized pieces Adjustments to lighting and spacing on-site The goal is simple: artwork should feel effortless on the wall—even though the process behind it is anything but. 6. Why NYC Art Galleries Partner With Full-Service Exhibition Teams Many NYC galleries work with full-service production partners to streamline the entire process—from print to install. Benefits include: Fewer vendors to manage Consistent quality across all stages Faster turnaround times Clear accountability At Skyframe NYC, galleries rely on a single team for fine art printing, custom framing, crating, delivery, and installation—ensuring every exhibition is handled with care and precision. Preparing for Your Next Exhibition Whether you’re planning a solo show, group exhibition, or traveling installation, preparation makes all the difference. Investing in proper materials, professional handling, and experienced installation ensures artwork is displayed exactly as intended—and protected long after opening night. If you’re preparing an upcoming exhibition in New York City, working with a team that understands gallery standards and timelines can make the process seamless from start to finish. 7. Exhibition Standards Don’t Change by Location For galleries working across multiple cities, consistency matters just as much as craftsmanship. Whether an exhibition is opening in New York or traveling to another market, the same standards for printing, framing, handling, and installation apply. That’s why many galleries choose production partners who operate across regions—so materials, processes, and presentation remain consistent from one location to the next. At Skyframe, that same full-service approach is available beyond New York. Our teams support exhibitions in multiple markets, including Miami, offering the same attention to detail across printing, custom framing, crating, delivery, and installation. 👉 Learn more about our full-service printing, framing, and installation in Miami. Planning an upcoming exhibition or art installation? Schedule a consultation with our team to ensure your artwork is handled, installed, and presented with care. Book a Consultation
Learn moreSkyframe Services for Hamptons Fine Art Fair Exhibitors 2025
The 19th annual Hamptons Art Fair is right around the corner, on July 10-13, showcasing some of the best contemporary and modern art in one of the most iconic summer destinations. With over 130 galleries, collectors, and designers in attendance, this four-day fair is the ultimate opportunity to showcase your work in front of a high-end audience. As the excitement builds, Skyframe is proud to partner with participating galleries and artists to provide reliable, expert support in presentation—because how your art is displayed matters just as much as the art itself. We are here to help your booth stand out, tell a story, and leave a lasting impression on both collectors and curators alike. From last-minute deliveries to booth ready installations, the Skyframe team is here to make sure your art is displayed at its absolute best. Why Skyframe? Skyframe has been a trusted name in New York City’s art community for over 30 years. Our work appears in museums, galleries, corporate collections, and private homes around the country. But it’s our personalized service, attention to detail, and deep respect for the art itself that keeps clients coming back. We understand how to meet the high standards of the fine art industry, and as the days to the fair approach, we know that the logistics can be stressful. That is why we offer full service support to our clients from start to finish. Our team is efficient, professional, and ready to assist wherever and whenever, from custom built frames to on-site installation. Services Available to Art Galleries and Artists Showcasing at the FairCustom Framing Skyframe offers museum-quality custom framing with over 10,000 different frame styles in stock—from clean, minimalist profiles to gallery-quality classics. No matter the style or aesthetic, we can assist in finding the right profile and finish to elevate each piece. Our experts can help you choose the right materials, from UV-protective glazing to acid-free mats and backing. All framing is done with care and precision, ready for the perfect gallery display. Fine Art Printing Our fine art printing studio uses the highest-quality archival printing technology to bring your work to life. From color-matched photographic prints to textured art reproductions on canvas, we produce prints with unmatched precision and tonal depth. From the first proof to final print, our experts work to meet your exact artistic vision. We understand the importance of accuracy and craftsmanship—especially when preparing for high-profile events like the Hamptons Fine Art Fair.Weekly Deliveries to the HamptonsSkyframe is already delivering to the Hamptons every week, so your last minute needs can be covered. We understand the unique logistics of East End events and are committed to providing reliable, timely service with every shipment.Whether you're sending a single piece or an entire booth's worth of artwork, our delivery team ensures your work will arrive safely, on time, and installation-ready. Special Offer: 15% OFF for Exhibitors As a thank you to the artists and galleries exhibiting at the 2025 Hamptons Fine Art Fair, Skyframe is offering an exclusive 15% off custom framing and fine art printing services related to the show. This discount is available only to those showcasing at the fair. Simply mention your participation in the fair when placing your order and we will do the rest!Ready to Elevate your Display? Whether you need framing for a future piece, a last-minute reprint, or an installation, Skyframe is here to help your art shine. Reach out today to schedule your order or book a delivery. Get noticed. Stay professional. Be prepared. Let's get you art show ready! Contact us
Learn more


