Monday, 3 April 2017

How to Cut a Mat Using a Utility Knife

Matting a picture is easy when you can purchase a pre-cut mat. Faced with a piece of art that doesn't conform to existing commercial standards, knowing how to do it yourself saves the expense and time of having a custom mat cut. Follow these steps to the letter, and you can cut your own professional, hinged mats using the most primitive of tools, a utility knife and metal ruler.

EditSteps

EditPlanning, Drawing Guide Lines and Cutting the Board to Size

  1. Assemble your supplies.  Have close at hand your art work that is to be matted, mat board, cardboard or foam core board for backing, a pencil, eraser, a metal ruler or one with a metal edge, a small piece of fine grain sandpaper or an emery board, and tape.
    Assemble your supplies.jpg
  2. Find a sturdy surface for mat cutting. Be sure it is larger than the mat you will be cutting and protect it with stiff cardboard. The hard, compressed type of cardboard on the backs of pads of art paper are sturdy and hard to penetrate with knife cuts. Join one or more together with tape to create a larger piece, if necessary.
    Sturdy surface.jpg
  3. Use only white, pebble surface mat board. Crescent brand can be found in the vertical bins at the craft store, near the frame department.
    White pebble board.jpg
  4. Utilize the perfect edges on the sheet of new mat board.
    Measure inside of frame.jpg
  5. Cut the piece you will need from the top right or left corner.  Measure the inside of the frame you will be using and, in pencil, lightly mark the cuts to be done on the mat board to that size.
    Pencil mark the mat.jpg
  6. Chose any brand or grade of utility knife. Be sure the blade is new and perfectly sharp. For many types, you will need a screw driver to open the handle to position a new blade.
    Chose utility knife.jpg
  7. Keep in mind to always protect the piece you will be using for your mat. If you should make a bad cut, the important part is saved. Align the ruler at your pencil mark and hold it securely against the board with enough pressure to keep it from slipping as you run the knife against it. All of the cuts you will be making will be done slowly, and with a light hand. The hand holding the knife should be relaxed and the knife held loosely. At first, your cut will barely penetrate the mat board. On the second and successive cuts the knife it will fall into the groove you established with the first cut. It will take two more light cuts, to be completely through the board. Turn the board and cut the second side. You might have to approach the table from a different direction in order to keep the proper position for cutting, with the knife cutting away from the good part of the mat, into the center or what will become the opening of the mat.
  8. When you have finished, take the test the piece of mat board to be sure it fits into your frame. If you have measured correctly, it should drop easily into place and be a perfect fit. Make adjustments at this point if necessary.

EditCutting the Mat Opening

  1. Place your art work on the mat and visually align it in the center. Mats generally have at least a few inches of white showing around the art piece. If there is less that, find a larger frame.
  2. Use a ruler and measure in from the outside edges of your mat. Determine how many inches on all sides you will need to have the hole in the mat be slightly smaller than the art piece. If there is a difference, traditionally, the bottom edge can be slightly larger. Write those four numbers on a piece of scrap paper for ready reference as you work.
    Double check hole size.jpg
  3. Set your art aside. Measure in from the four outside edges of your mat and make a series of tiny, elongated dots in pencil, plotting the shape of the cuts for the interior of the mat or mat opening.
  4. Cut the corners first. Place the knife on the mat board with the point of the knife exactly aligned with the top corner of the mat and press hard, straight down, to pierce the board. Turn the work and repeat on the second side of the corner. Creating these "L" shapes at each corner will insure perfect corners in your finished mat. These corner cuts in the board will also be starting and stopping points for your side cuts.
    Cut cor4ners first.jpg
  5. To cut the mat sides, repeat the steps described above. Always cut away from the important part. In this case have your ruler on the mat side and cut toward the center. Use three light cuts to get through the board. Don't attempt to tug or pull the center away. Keep cutting light strokes with the ruler until the center comes away and drops out.
  6. Use sandpaper on rough spots. Sand in one direction inward from outside, or good side of your mat. Don't try to rub, tear or pull any imperfections. Use slow and methodical strokes of sandpaper or emery board.
    Sandpaper lightly.jpg
  7. Erase all pencil lines. Use a pink eraser, an art gum or kneaded eraser. The "pebbled" surface of the mat board makes erasures invisible.
    Erase pencil lines.jpg

EditCreating a Hinged Matt

  1. Cut a piece of cardboard to serve as backing. This can be lighter weight and cheaper cardboard or a piece of foam core board. Make it slightly smaller than the mat's outside dimensions. Align the top edge of the backing with that of the mat and tape the two edges with a continuous strip of tape to form a hinge at the top.
    Tape two edges.jpg
  2. Fold the mat and backing closed and tape from side to side on the outside to reinforce the hinge.
    Tape inside.jpg
  3. Place your art on the backing. Check to see it is aligned perfectly by closing the mat. Open again, and tape the art at intervals with two inch pieces of tape. Strive for neatness and cut, rather than tear these small pieces of tape.
    Tape art to backing.jpg
  4. Set the matted piece into the frame and check to see that there is nothing between the glass and the art, such as eraser crumbs, lint or fuzz.  Erase again, because new pencil marks will show up now. Check to see if you have signed your work and that the signature is showing. If you cleaned the glass, be sure it is completely dry before closing up the matted art in the frame.
    Set into frame.jpg

EditTips

  • Decide whether you want to work with archival materials, boards, tape, etc. Those materials are expensive and if longevity isn't an issue, use ordinary materials; boards, backing board, and masking tape. It takes quite a few years for the supplies to turn yellow and protecting your art from light and sunshine will prolong its life.
  • Start with white or off white "pebbled" or slightly textured mat board. When you are comfortable cutting mats, graduate to other types of board.
  • Mat board is made with only a thin sheet of paper covering the cardboard so there is little room for error. Colored mats require a sure hand in cutting, so develop your skills before graduating to colored or slick surfaced board.
  • Get a new utility knife, if necessary, or at least new blades for an old knife. Be sure it is secure when opened and the blade is exposed. There should be no wobble where the blade extends from the knife's handle.
  • When you reverse the blade to the sharp end, put an "X" in indelible marker on the end of the blade that is used and dull.
  • Look to see if the backing cardboard of the frame has a hanger. If so, be sure to get the backing aligned correctly, hanger at the top.

EditWarnings

  • Working with sharp blades it is necessary to remain focused on your task. Keep the hand holding the ruler well back from the edge you will be cutting.
  • Keep all mat making materials away from children.


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