Yes, picture hanging systems from AS Hanging are engineered to resist humidity and corrosion, and the level of protection you get depends on which components you choose. Because our tracks, cables, rods, and hooks are designed to perform in everything from private homes to museums, galleries, ...
Yes. AS Hanging Display Systems offers step by step installation videos for most of its products, so you can see exactly how each system goes together before you pick up a drill. The fastest way to find them is on our YouTube channel at youtube.com/@ASHanging where every tutorial is ...
In most cases, yes. When a return is approved, refunds are typically issued back to the original payment method used on the order, so a purchase made on a credit card is credited to that same card, and a purchase made through another accepted method is returned the same way. This keeps ...
Yes. AS Hanging Display Systems works closely with art professionals every day, and our team is available to help with system selection, load planning, layout decisions, security setups, and custom configurations for almost any display environment. Whether you are outfitting a single ...
Yes. AS Hanging Display Systems are fully compatible with concrete and brick walls when you use the correct masonry anchors and drilling approach. In fact, masonry walls often make an excellent base for a permanent track installation because the substrate is dense, stable, and capable of ...
Yes. AS Hanging Display Systems offers a full range of ceiling-suspended hanging solutions designed to display artwork, signage, panels, and other items without putting any holes in your walls. These systems use a discreet ceiling-mounted track or anchor combined with hanging cables or ...
A good starting point for a set of three pictures is 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 cm) of space between frames. That range keeps the grouping connected enough to read as one display, while leaving enough breathing room that each piece still stands on its own. From there, adjust based on frame ...
Few elements in visual art carry as much weight as the eyes. Across centuries and cultures, painters have used eyes to communicate emotion, reveal personality, suggest hidden meaning, and pull the viewer directly into the heart of a composition. When you are choosing artwork for your home, ...
For most displays, leave 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 cm) of space between pictures. This range gives each piece room to breathe while keeping the grouping visually connected, so the arrangement reads as one intentional composition rather than a scattered collection. Frame size, wall size, and ...
Hang artwork so the bottom of the frame sits about 6 to 12 inches above the top of the furniture. That spacing keeps the picture visually connected to the piece below while leaving enough open wall so the grouping does not feel cramped. The exact number within that range depends on the ...