Memorabilia frames are made for keepsakes that don’t fit neatly into a standard picture frame. If you’re preserving a meaningful item—like a medal, patch, pin, ticket stub, small textile, certificate, or a set of pieces from the same event—this collection focuses on wall frames that help you present it securely and cleanly. Many options are designed with a deeper profile to allow space between the glazing and the item, so thicker or layered memorabilia can sit neatly without looking cramped.
These frames are also a strong choice when you want a story-driven arrangement: an item paired with a photo, a certificate, or a small caption area. That layout approach works well for sports achievements, graduation milestones (like a diploma or certificate with a tassel), service recognition pieces, travel memories (tickets, postcards, maps), and family milestones. The goal is a finished presentation that looks intentional on the wall—at home, in an office, or as a gift.
As you shop, plan around three things: the item’s thickness (so you choose enough depth), the overall layout (single keepsake vs. multi-opening), and the visual balance created by mat borders and spacing. If your memorabilia is more dimensional and needs extra interior room, consider a shadow box–style depth frame such as this black shadow box frame.

Measure the thickest part of your keepsake (including any mounting board you plan to use). Choose a frame profile that provides enough interior space so the item isn’t pressed against the glazing. For items that need separation from the glazing, spacers can help maintain clean, even spacing.
Decide whether the focus is a single hero item or a set that tells a fuller story.
Measure each component (memorabilia plus any photo/certificate) and then decide how much mat border you want around it. Mat-forward styling can make irregular items look intentional by giving them breathing room and a clean edge.
Glazing affects clarity, reflections, and durability. If the frame will hang in a bright room or you want added protection, consider a UV-filtering option like UV acrylic glazing.
Before hanging, confirm whether you need vertical or horizontal orientation and where the frame will live (home, office, hallway). For a neat, ready-to-hang finish, you may want hardware installed and the contents secured during assembly.
