Get More From Your Interior Design Budget With Giclee Prints
No interior design project is complete without wall art. Whether you’re re-arranging a room or doing a full makeover, empty walls leave a room feeling sparse and uninteresting. If you are a fan of interior design shows you’ll see a number of inexpensive do-it-yourself options that look nice; but what if you’re not artistically inclined? Well, there are always those cheap, mass produced framed art prints you find in department stores and craft shops. Trouble is, they look great in the store but end up looking cheap and cheesy when you get them home and mounted on your walls. And what if you or your client is looking for something more than just wall decorations?
At this point it might be time to consider making an investment in one or a collection of original paintings. Of course doing this will require a substantial financial investment; paintings large enough to have a significant presence on your walls are typically hundreds to thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars each, even from lesser-known artists. So what do you do when you want to collect or acquire a number of fine art works but are working with a limited budget?
Consider Limited Edition Giclee Fine Art Prints; they represent the finest alternative to original works. These kind of fine art prints offer a significant savings to the high priced original art works they are created from. With their exceptional quality, Giclee prints are nearly indistinguishable from their source work, and represent an exceptional alternative to original works for adorning home and office walls. In the right frame they not only complement the interior design of a room, but create a special ambiance as well.
So whether you’re buying fine art for yourself or for an interior design project, you can wow your visitors and your clients with exhibition and museum quality Giclee prints. Their accuracy results from a process that is able to capture and reproduce all of the nuances, tonalities, and hues as well as the texture of the source medium, right down to the weave of the canvas or the texture of the watercolor paper.








