Anyone searching for a "canvas print with a frame" usually worries they'll get a roll of fabric in a tube and have to rush off to a framing shop. That doesn't happen with us: every SRC Collection canvas is printed in Bet Shemesh, hand-stretched over an internal wood frame and arrives finished — ready to hang the moment you open the box. Put simply, the frame is already inside, and it's included in the price. The real question is a different one: settle for the clean gallery-wrap look, or add a decorative float frame around it. On this page we'll explain honestly when each option works, without pushing an add-on you don't need.
Every canvas print here is stretched over a wooden stretcher bar before it ever leaves the studio in Bet Shemesh. The fabric wraps the internal frame, the edges are finished on the back, and the piece reaches you flat, taut and rigid — hang it on a single nail and you're done. There's no need for additional framing, no trip to a framer and no hidden cost after the purchase. This is the standard you see in galleries: the canvas itself is the finished product. If that's what you were after when you asked about a "canvas with a frame" — you already have your answer, and it's included in the price.
A gallery wrap is the stretched canvas as it is — its side edges are exposed, and the look is clean and contemporary. A decorative frame, by contrast, is an external wood or aluminum profile that surrounds the stretched canvas. It doesn't protect the artwork and doesn't improve the print — it's purely a design choice. In most Israeli homes, and certainly with contemporary art, abstracts or pop art, a gallery wrap looks more precise and doesn't compete with the artwork. An external frame earns its place mainly in certain styles, and we cover that in the next section. Worth knowing: a canvas never needs glass, so even "full framing" with simple glazing simply isn't relevant here.
A float frame is a thin profile that surrounds the canvas with a small air gap, so the fabric appears to "float" within it. It works nicely in three cases: reproductions of classic paintings, where a dark frame line complements the painting's language; spaces designed with a heavier line — wood bookcases, dark dining areas, statement offices; and busy walls, where a bounding line helps the artwork hold its place. If that's your case, our stretched canvas is ready for exactly that — any framer in your town can fit a float frame onto it in a quick job. And if you're unsure, send us a photo of the wall on WhatsApp (054-776-0643) and we'll tell you honestly whether it's worth the add-on. In most cases our answer is that you don't need it.
A 40x60 canvas starts at 535 shekels, 60x90 around 1,100 shekels, and 100x150 — a centerpiece-wall format — around 1,540 shekels. All prices include the stretching over the wood frame and the full finishing; there's no "framing surcharge" afterward. Every piece is printed to order in Bet Shemesh and reaches anywhere in the country within up to 18 business days. Before printing, you get a free mockup of the piece on your own wall, to confirm size and color before the fabric goes into the machine. Choose from the catalog — paintings, abstracts, landscapes and more — or send us a piece you love and we'll adapt it.
No. The canvas arrives stretched on an internal wood frame, with finished edges and a closed back — ready to hang immediately. Extra framing is purely a design choice, not a necessity.
It's a thin profile that surrounds the canvas with an air gap, so the fabric appears to float. It adds most to classic reproductions and to spaces with a heavier design line. For contemporary art, a clean gallery wrap is usually better.
A 40x60 canvas from 535 shekels, 60x90 around 1,100 shekels, 100x150 around 1,540 shekels. The stretching over the wood frame is included in the price — there's no extra framing cost.
Yes. Send a photo of the wall on WhatsApp 054-776-0643 and you'll get a free mockup with the piece at its exact size — before we print, with no commitment.