Give a 14x18 canvas a clean, gallery-style finish by adding a crisp floating border that defines the edges without covering the artwork’s face. A floater frame is built so the piece sits inside the frame with a small, even reveal around all sides—ideal when the canvas edges are painted, wrapped, or otherwise finished and you want that edge detail to remain visible. The 14 x 18 format is a go-to for portraits, pet paintings, figure studies, and landscape scenes, and it reads especially well in hallways, bedrooms, offices, and smaller living-room walls where medium-size art needs to look intentional and complete.
These 14x18 floater frames are intended for true 14 x 18 stretched canvas and mounted artwork such as canvas panels, wood panels, and cradled panels designed for floating presentation. For the best fit, measure the artwork itself (not an existing outer frame), and confirm the depth/thickness so the frame can support it securely and keep the reveal consistent. Because floaters rely on a reasonably square piece, check for warping or out-of-square corners before ordering—an uneven canvas can create an uneven gap.
Use a 14x18 floating frame when you want modern, clean lines and a finished perimeter that looks ready to hang for a show, client delivery, gifting, or a polished home installation. If you need help confirming your measurements, see how to measure artwork.
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 holds the artwork from the sides and back so the piece appears to “float” within the frame. Instead of covering the front surface, it creates a small reveal around the perimeter—an intentional border that sharpens the presentation and makes a 14x18 canvas feel complete and ready to hang.
Choose a 14x18 floater frame when you have a 14x18 stretched canvas or mounted panel and want a modern, clean edge with a consistent floating reveal. It’s a strong fit for commissions (portraits and pets), landscape studies, and series work where multiple 14x18 pieces need to match in color and profile for a cohesive wall set.
For best results, dry-fit the artwork to confirm the reveal looks even on all sides before final fastening. If you’re installing a stretched canvas or art panel into a floater frame for the first time, follow a step-by-step guide like Stretched Canvas or Art Panel Installed Into Floater Frame.
If you’re framing multiple canvases or building a consistent look across sizes, you can also browse floater frames for canvas for additional profiles and finishes suited to mounted artwork.
