Twenty-two years on 15th Street
Between Blake and Wazee, under the old brick of Lower Downtown, there's a shop where Denver brings the things it can't replace. A game-worn jersey. A grandmother's ketubah. The concert poster from the night everything changed. Since 2004, our designers have framed them all: one piece at a time, every piece built in-house.
Walk in, under the original brick and fourteen-foot ceilings, and you'll find more than 2,000 frame samples on the wall (woods, metals, even eco-friendly green mouldings) and thousands of acid-free mats in linen, suede and leather, plus a team whose combined framing experience passes the hundred-year mark. We design around your piece and your budget, then craft it to museum conservation standards: archival materials, glazing that filters up to 99% of UV rays, corners you could set a level against. Most customers find our pricing comparable to, and often less than, the national chains.
The shop gives back, too: we regularly donate framing services, matboards and framing certificates to Denver-area schools and 501(c)3 nonprofits.
You may also meet Helton, the shop mascot. He has opinions about mouldings.