Stretching the Canvas
We will be glad to demonstrate how to stretch your own canvas so that you may save even more money because our goal is for you to purchase your art at prices that you can make a profit on when you sell it.

Archival Coating
Our archival UV / moisture-resistant coating technique provides one of the best looking UV/moisture barriers you will ever see. We spent thousands of dollars to eliminate the streaks and surface blemishes that plague some coating products and techniques. We provide a full protective get-it-wet coating—not a "misting" as many companies offer. It definitely has a wow factor, and it comes standard on every canvas print you will receive.

We feature
Chromata White™ Canvas
Legacy Fine Art Printers uses BreathingColor's Brilliance Chromata™ White Canvas. This is a textured, 20.5 mil, Bright White, consistent Poly Cotton Blend Matte Canvas using an acid-free, neutral pH coating.
Brilliance Chromata White™ Canvas
Passes
the Fine Art Trade Guild's Blue Wool Test

Brilliance Chromata White™ canvas underwent extensive testing by an independent UKAS (United Kingdom Accreditation Service) accredited laboratory.
They concluded that BreathingColor's Chromata White™ Canvas exceeds the Fine Art Trade Guild archival standards for pH and light-fastness.
The Fine Art Trade Guild established these standards to protect the interests of, and to increase the confidence of consumers who are purchasing archival-grade art media.
Click here for the Chromata White Canvas Fine Art Trade Guild Certification.
Click here for the Chromata White Canvas Technical Specifications.

The end of the price list is never the end of the story:
No matter who prints your art work, ensure that they are using a color-managed workflow so that your giclee prints will look the same as your artist proof should you ever need to print at another color-managed shop.
Our work is industry standard. The only thing that will prevent you from obtaining a fine art giclee that looks just like your artist proof is that you are visiting a print shop that has inferior equipment, or they do not calibrate their equipment using modern color management software and hardware.
That is a fact.
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