This practice is not acceptable. The symbolism alone is bad enough. You just sold a 2k piece of art and you put it in hadty bag...wtf. I am embarrased as an artist to witness this. Spend a few dollars on some bags you cheap d bag. I am doing a show and 90% of the artwork is going out in freakin trash bags. If that is what you think of your own work, you have problems...this is not right. Stop it.

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  • ULINE.COM

    I package everything in clear plastic bags and I get all of them from ULINE.

    They have clear bags for art of all sizes. Here's a ink for one product. They go up to 25x37 & 28x36.

    Here's a link: http://www.uline.com/BL_5590/Crystal-Clear-Bags

    Clear bags. You want clear bags so other customers can see what your customer bought, and they can ask where they got it. Free advertising.

    • Agree 100% with Tom - drives me nuts.  I do what Chris says - Uline, clear bags so everyone can see what my customer purchased.  I'll even tell cusomers (only half kiddingly) if they have my art turned so the back is showing, to turn it the other way so people can see it.  They usually get it and do turn it.  I've had new customers come up to me, say they saw what someone else purchased and asked where they got it. 

  • Paper, plastic, cloth or whatever else is available should look nice enough to equate to the quality of work you are creating and selling. I personally like the cloth because they are stronger and people are more likely to keep them and reuse them ( a good reason to have your website and/or contact info printed on them.)

  • I feel the same way as you do, Tom. I've seen it day in and day out. Trash bags set a really bad example for expensive framed artwork and you are right about the symbolism. Oh, they're leaf bags, you say? Still, they look the same and carry the same symbolism to me. It's just not even funny anymore.

  • I have 4 or 5 sizes of 2d pieces and I have a bag that fits properly for each size. Before I bought bags I would wrap every piecr in craft paper. If someone is spending a lot of money on your art work should take the slightest effort to make it special not look like trash.
  • When I started out, I used used store bags. among them were ones from Goodwill. I totally forgot about that until the museum shop curator whispered to me one day that I might want to upgrade my bags. When I realized what I was doing, I laughed and invested in,better bags. At holiday time, I even use white boxes for some of the items and people carry them as if they have just purchased the Hope Diamond.
  • I have always used nice cloth bags that I bought for sales of my woodart and have had a lot of compliments about how nice they were...never used trash bags... 

    I am not sure what a hadty bag...wtf  is either.

    Many 2d artists have quite large framed pieces and I cannot recall seeing very large cloth bags in huge sizes.

    Maybe you could offer some recommendations and suggestions to the trash bag  and hadty bag...wtf users as a good gesture to help them in their plight...What do you use...?

    • HEFTY BAG. And wtf is whatever you want it to be. Large bags 40x60 and over are available everywhere on line. I am not suggesting cloth bags. Just clear flat bags. You can pay a lot or you can pay a little. Go in with a few artists and buy a box of 100. There is no excuse. If I was buying a piece and they put it I a trash bag, there would be a problem. There is no excuse. It is not cool at all. The level of CHEAPNESS by artist that can afford to buy bags is astounding. Stop it.
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