THE PIECE
A clean, understated mid-century wooden frame featuring a shallow beveled profile and warm natural wood tone, dating from the late 1940s to the mid-1950s. The molding is slim and machine-cut, but the softened edges and surface wear show authentic age rather than reproduction distressing.
Frames from this transitional post-WWII period were intentionally simple — moving away from the more decorative styles of the 1930s and toward the sleek, modernist lines of the 1950s and 60s. This one fits squarely between the two aesthetics: modest, practical, warm, and well-made.
The piece retains its original glass, visible age scratches, and corner nails/staples typical of mid-century domestic framing shops.
DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION
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Material: Solid milled hardwood or tight-grain softwood
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Profile:
→ Shallow bevel on outer edge
→ Clean flat interior edge
→ Slim molding typical of late-40s–50s photography frames -
Finish:
→ Original natural wood finish, lightly oxidized
→ Matte sheen consistent with early nitrocellulose lacquer or oil finish -
Craftsmanship:
→ Machine-cut molding
→ Mitered corners with early wire nails
→ Glass is original to the frame -
Patina:
→ Light edge wear
→ Softened corners
→ Aged tone from decades of sunlight and handling -
Condition: Structurally excellent; surface shows authentic mid-century age
DATE & HISTORICAL CONTEXT
This frame style appears from the late 1940s through the mid-1950s, during a period when American homes shifted toward simpler, more modern design after WWII. Frames were made to be lightweight, affordable, and versatile, meant to hold:
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black-and-white family photographs
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servicemen’s portraits
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graduation photos
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small watercolors or prints
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early color prints (Kodacolor, introduced 1942 but became common post-war)
The shift away from ornate detail reflects broader mid-century design influences — Scandinavian minimalism, Bauhaus principles, and the post-war domestic aesthetic emphasizing clean lines and natural materials.