Give a 10" x 10" canvas or mounted panel a clean, gallery-finished presentation by setting it inside a floater frame that leaves a crisp reveal around all four edges. The square format reads especially intentional when the spacing is even, helping small works feel polished on a gallery wall, in a grid arrangement, or as an accent piece in tighter spaces like entryways, kitchens, offices, bathrooms, and nook walls.
This collection is focused on the fit you need when your artwork already measures 10" x 10" across the face. A true 10x10 floater frame holds the artwork from the sides/back so the front surface stays fully visible—no front lip covering the edges like a traditional frame. That “floating” effect visually separates the art from the wall and highlights the square shape, which is why 10x10 is a popular choice for series work and cohesive sets.
Before ordering, confirm your piece is actually 10" x 10" (width and height) and consider the artwork’s depth/thickness. Stretched canvases, canvas panels, and cradled wood panels can vary in thickness, and the right floater frame profile helps the art seat properly so the reveal looks intentional rather than tight on one side. If you’re framing multiple 10x10 pieces, matching depth and true size across the set helps keep spacing consistent from frame to frame.
These 10x10 floater frames are best for mounted artwork such as stretched canvas, canvas boards, and wood panels—especially when the edges are finished and meant to be seen. If your work is on paper and needs coverage or protection, a different framing approach is usually a better match than a floater frame.
Totally raw wood ready to paint. This moulding is intended to be painted. It is raw wood so the frame could end up having different shades of wood. That means it might not match rail to rail. Make it your way!
A floater frame creates a “floating” look by supporting the artwork from the sides/back so the face of the piece remains fully visible. With 10" x 10" artwork, that consistent gap (reveal) around the perimeter emphasizes the square format and gives small pieces a finished, gallery-ready presence—especially when displayed as a pair, a series, or a grid.
If you measured and found your artwork isn’t exactly 10" x 10", these nearby options are common alternatives depending on what you actually have:
