How to pack a painting

Without suitable packaging, even if the courier is careful, transport can cause damage to your painting. This page outlines the steps to protect a painting before transport.

Packing guide

Why packaging is essential

An object that’s not well protected can arrive scratched, damaged, or broken, even if the carrier is as careful as possible.

With Cocolis, your items travel with individuals or professionals on journeys they're already making. They are handled during loading, in transit, and unloading—each a moment where good packaging makes all the difference.

An object can arrive scratched, broken, or incomplete. These situations are rare but avoidable and almost never happen when an item is properly packed from the start.

insurance

Prepare your painting before packing

Photograph the painting from several angles before packing it, clearly showing the condition of the frame and painted surface. For a canvas on a stretcher, check that the canvas is not coming away from the stretcher and that the tension wedges are in place. For a painting under glass, treat the glass like a mirror: make an X with tape on the glass before any other protection.

This is also a good moment to gather your materials and plan the right protection for each part. Good packaging preparation happens before you start, not as you go along.

before packing

Steps to pack a painting

  1. Cover the painted surface with a sheet of glassine paper or crystal paper – this acid-free paper protects the paint without rubbing or sticking to it. Avoid bubble wrap in direct contact with a painted canvas or an antique painting.
  2. Add a layer of bubble wrap over the protective paper, secured with tape placed on the bubble wrap, never on the frame.
  3. Place the painting between two pieces of rigid cardboard cut to its size, one on each side. Hold everything together with tape.
  4. Reinforce the corners with folded cardboard pieces – the corners of the frame are the most vulnerable areas.
  5. Transport the painting upright, never flat with other objects stacked on top.
packaging before shipment

Good habits to know

The essential points to avoid problems during transport

step 1

Adapt packaging to the item

Packaging isn’t universal. Take into account the fragility, weight, and shape of your painting to choose the right protection – the main thing is that the item is well protected during transport.

step 2

Don’t seal the packaging too soon

Leave your painting visible when the courier arrives. They must be able to check its condition before taking charge and take photos with and without protection. Seal the packaging only afterwards.

step 3

Take photos before shipping

Photograph your item before and after packing. In case of a problem, these photos are your only evidence of its initial condition.

Step 4

Inform about special requirements

Some items have specific requirements: must be kept upright, particular handling direction, extra fragility. Clearly inform the courier about these before departure.

Step 5

Never stick tape on surfaces

Brown tape can leave marks or damage finishes. Never stick it directly to an item – always use an intermediate layer.

Frequent mistakes & things to watch out for

Some mistakes happen regularly and explain most damage on arrival.

Bubble wrap should never be in direct contact with a painted canvas, watercolour, or work on paper – the bubbles can permanently mark the surface. Always use a layer of glassine paper or crystal paper between the artwork and the bubble wrap. For old or valuable paintings, consider additional protection with honeycomb cardboard.

broken vase

Transporting painting with Cocolis

Simpler, more human transport

With Cocolis, your item doesn't go through a warehouse, isn't passed from hand to hand and doesn't endure multiple re-loadings. It's delivered directly from point A to point B, in a single trip, by an individual or professional already making the journey.

In reality, it’s often someone like your neighbour or cousin making the trip for their own reasons who takes special care of what they're carrying. It's not a courier under pressure to deliver dozens of parcels a day. This difference means a lot in how your item is handled.

Fewer handlings also means less risk. But your item will still be loaded and unloaded, and a sudden brake can happen: correct packing is still essential to protect sensitive areas at these key moments.

Practically, packing doesn't need to be designed to withstand a whole logistics chain. It just needs to provide effective protection for a single journey—which is achievable by everyone.

Frequently asked questions

Other packing guides

For further advice, you can review packing guides for different types of item.

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