I'm not sure your example fits Doremus' description: trim the image to the exact dimensions and aspect ratio the photographer desires without a border
EDIT: at a closer look it seems you trimmed the photo and drymouned it without the border - what seems to be the border is indeed the mounting board alone.
The photograph is mounted on matt board identical to the board used to make the overmat (passe partout).....so the colours match.
That's how it's done...& that is what Doremus described....it's called float mounting. It is one of the most common ways to display a photograph.
" cut a window mat 1/4 to 1/2 inch larger than the image dimensions so as to show the image border and the signature under the print at bottom right".
The photograph is mounted on matt board identical to the board used to make the overmat (passe partout).....so the colours match.
What Doremus wrote "so as to show the image border" is not quite correct grammatically....because you have already cut off all the paper border around the image....and the "1/2" larger than the image dimension" is intended to leave space around image. I hope this is somewhat more clear.
But the color of the border doesn't match the paper color of the print itself. This can be a good reason to print with a border on the actual paper itself.
With respect to color prints, I carefully match the over-mat (window mat) with the exposed bit of white border of the print itself, using nuances of Alphamat whites. Formerly, with Cibachrome, which has black borders, I often used black Alphamat, or else cropped right up into the edge of the image with a white mat instead. Or I could cold-mount
Ciba (or now Fujiflex), fully trimmed, right onto a white substrate.
A different strategy than when hot dry-mounting trimmed black and white FB prints, where the white border of the print itself has been completely removed, and I standardize on a single variety of museum ragboard white.
Albums are in a still different category.
That's how it's done...& that is what Doremus described....it's called float mounting. It is one of the most common ways to display a photograph.
" cut a window mat 1/4 to 1/2 inch larger than the image dimensions so as to show the image border and the signature under the print at bottom right".
The photograph is mounted on matt board identical to the board used to make the overmat (passe partout).....so the colours match.
What Doremus wrote "so as to show the image border" is not quite correct grammatically....because you have already cut off all the paper border around the image....and the "1/2" larger than the image dimension" is intended to leave space around image. I hope this is somewhat more clear.
I really like this look and is what I do with some of my drawings as well. Whether a photo or a drawing, I like to see the edge of the paper and not have it covered by the window mat.
Well, actually it was grammatically correct, I just used the wrong word, thereby not clearly saying what I meant... What Doremus wrote "so as to show the image border" is not quite correct grammatically....
Well, actually it was grammatically correct, I just used the wrong word, thereby not clearly saying what I meant![]()
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