flōtblog: How fotoflōts are used

Interesting things people are doing with fotoflōts

Archive for the 'Diptychs, triptychs, …' Category

Diptychs, triptychs, ... &fotoflōts on walls &fotoflōt arrangements &Wall collage | 24 Nov 2009

Here’s a mind bending panoramic display

Bob Miklosey contacted us to see whether we could handle a panoramic image over 50 inches wide. We told him our widest size is 30 inches, but some customers have split large images into two or more panels, mounted side-by-side. Bob ran with the suggestion and created this innovative fotoflōt arrangement: Most images are split […]

Diptychs, triptychs, ... &fotoflōts on walls &fotoflōt arrangements &Wall collage | 24 Nov 2009

How to display oversize images on fotoflōts

Right now our largest-size fotoflōt is 20″x30″. We get many requests for larger sizes, and growing numbers of customers are ordering multi-panel configurations when their size requirements exceed our current offerings. The example below shows how a 40″x60″ image can be displayed on fotoflōt. The original image was cropped into four 20″x30″ segments. Each segment is mounted […]

Diptychs, triptychs, ... &Wall collage | 01 Feb 2009

fotoflōting a family picture wall

We had wanted to put up a wall of family pictures in our study for years. Once fotoflōt was born, it was a no-brainer to use it for this project. It took a while to get our act together, but we finally got it done last year. We’re delighted with the result. We have a […]

Diptychs, triptychs, ... | 25 Feb 2008

Interactive images

Carolyn Allen, one of our early customers, fotoflōted her entire family – seven 15″x20″ black & white portraits that she took. The fotoflōts are mounted in their stairwell. She sent photos of the installation and said, “They show how true it is that anyone can do it! In just an hour and a half we […]

Diptychs, triptychs, ... | 13 Jan 2008

Hide an eyesore

Kerry Ellis, a SmugMug member, describes the problem she was trying to solve: I’m sure we all have those little (or not-so-little) eyesores in our home that we’d like to conceal somehow – in a not-too-obvious and kind’a pretty way. In my home, this is the circuit breaker box, which greets visitors to my home […]