Framecrazy
CGF, Certified Grumble Framer
Is it true that Thomas Kinkade puts his DNA in his signature on his paintings? What does he do spit in the paint? Kinda cool, kinda creepy. Do any other artists do that?
Great,now that`s in my head....Only not rolling on them,more like shaking a Champagne bottle,and spraying the foamMaybe he throws the prints on the floor, with all the money he is making off them, and rolls around naked covering the whole thing with his "DNA"!
Get that image out of your head! Even worse with the "lights" isn't it!
Uh, yeah, some of those paintings are the crime scene!Serendipity - they find his DNA at a crime scene!
Bill Hannah and Joe Barbarea ( the cartoons guys) had special made pens that when they signed the cells they had there DNA in the ink. This was a way to keep them from getting reproduced.
j Paul said:...And then there is this article which attempts to explain all of the different editions and their value, and the fact that he doesn't even hand sign them anymore....
This was an interesting quote from the article:
"Bev Doolittle’s most recent print, Music in the Wind, has an S/N edition size of 43,500; however, this is the only print she published during the 1997 year."
Even if that's the only one she published all year, she would have to sign more than 119 a day just to get them all done in one year.
It just seems ridiculous to me to call something L/E if it's over 5,000 or so.
Just the name Kincade makes me cringe, and most of my artist friends feel the same way. But hey, he's not trying to gain the respect of his peers, he's trying to pull dollars out of purses and wallets, no matter what he has to resort to to do it.
Who cares about his peers and my artists friends. It's business! Didn't we start our businesses to make money? I did. I'm in a small village outside a depressed city and it ADDED $250,000 to my sales, $100,000 in December alone, without adding to payroll or custom framing work load. That's not the case today but it was nice for about 8 years. I always told my customers to buy it because you like it, not as an investment. Nobody put a gun to their heads. It was the smartest thing i did in the 20 years I have been in business. Built a new house, set up my retirement and exposed my framing business to people who normally wouldn't have come in. Thanks Thom!! It was great while it lasted.
This article also says that the only way to buy a print on paper and to have it continue to have an investment value is not to frame it.
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