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Glass vs Acrylic Glazing: The Bit Nobody Explains

The static charge, the scratch reality, and the size threshold where this decision actually starts to matter.

Jasmine Okoro
JASMINE OKORO
June 11, 2026
Glass vs Acrylic Glazing: The Bit Nobody Explains

Every guide to picture frame glazing reads the same way: a tidy pros and cons list, a vague nod to "personal preference," and a recommendation that conveniently aligns with whatever the writer is selling. Nobody talks about the static charge that turns acrylic into a dust magnet, or the specific size at which the choice actually starts to matter. So here is the honest version.

What "glazing" actually means

Glazing is the clear sheet that sits between your print and the outside world. It protects against dust, fingerprints, UV light, and the occasional flying object. The two options are glass (usually 2mm float glass, sometimes tempered, sometimes treated for clarity) and acrylic (also called plexiglass, PMMA, or perspex depending on who is selling it to you).

Plexiglass, acrylic, and perspex are all the same material with different brand names. If you see "PMMA" on a spec sheet, that is also acrylic. The differences between them come down to thickness, optical grade, and whether the sheet has any anti-glare or UV coating.

A bright living room with a large framed botanical print above a low sideboard, soft morning light raking across the glazing

The size threshold nobody specifies

Most guides say "use acrylic for larger frames" without ever telling you what larger means. Here is the actual threshold: somewhere between 40x50cm and 60x80cm, the maths starts to change.

Below 40x50cm, glass is fine. It is heavier, but the weight difference is negligible, the cost is lower, and the scratch resistance is genuinely better. A small framed print on a picture ledge or above a bedside table has no real reason to use acrylic.

Above 60x80cm, acrylic starts to make obvious sense. A sheet of 2mm glass at 70x100cm is heavy enough to make hanging awkward, stresses your wall fixtures more, and turns a dropped frame into a small disaster. Acrylic at the same size weighs roughly half as much and will not shatter into a thousand pieces if it falls off the wall.

Between those two sizes, it depends on where the frame is going. Above a sofa with a toddler nearby? Acrylic. In a quiet hallway with secure fixings? Glass is fine. Shipping it across the country? Acrylic, every time.

The static charge problem

This is the bit nobody explains, and the reason a lot of people end up disappointed with acrylic without knowing why.

Acrylic builds up a static charge. The moment you wipe it, the moment a dry winter morning rolls around, the moment you walk past it wearing wool, that sheet of acrylic becomes a dust magnet. Particles literally jump toward it from the surrounding air. You will clean it, step back, and watch a fresh layer of dust settle within minutes.

There are two solutions, and only two. Either you use an anti-static brush (a soft natural-bristle brush designed specifically for this purpose, sold in art and photography shops) to gently sweep the surface, or you accept that you will be dusting it more often than glass.

If a print is going somewhere prominent and you are houseproud, this matters. If it is going in a busy family hallway where things get dusty anyway, you probably will not notice.

The scratch reality

Acrylic scratches. Not "scratches eventually if you are careless," but "scratches if you wipe it with the wrong cloth one time."

You cannot use kitchen paper. You cannot use a standard glass cleaner with ammonia (it clouds the surface permanently). You cannot use a rough microfiber, only the softest grade. And if you do scratch it, the only fix is a plastic polish like Novus #2, careful circular motion, and the acceptance that the repair will be visible in certain lights.

Glass forgives nearly everything. A bit of newspaper, a splash of vinegar and water, the back of your sleeve in a pinch. Acrylic punishes you for any of that.

The trade-off is that glass does not get scratched, it gets smashed. There is no middle ground with glass. Either it is perfect or it is in a thousand pieces on your floor.

A gallery wall in a hallway featuring four medium framed prints in dark walnut frames, arranged in a grid

The clarity debate

Here is where the industry gets slippery. Standard float glass has a slight green tint, visible at the edges and noticeable across the face of larger sheets. Look at the edge of a glass coffee table and you will see it: that faint aquarium-green cast. On a small frame, you will not notice. On an 80x120cm landscape print with a lot of white in it, you absolutely will.

Standard acrylic, by contrast, is genuinely water-clear. No green tint, no edge colour. For prints with subtle tonal work, deep blacks, or large pale areas, that clarity matters.

Then there is "museum glass," which is glass treated with an anti-reflective coating and (usually) UV protection. It is gorgeous. It is also expensive, and it scratches more easily than untreated glass because of that coating. The acrylic equivalent is something like Optium or Conservation Clear, which combine UV protection with anti-reflective treatment.

For most people, on most prints, in most rooms, the clarity difference between standard glass and standard acrylic is not life-changing. It becomes a real factor when you are dealing with large pieces, direct light from a window, or fine detail you actually want to study up close. If you are buying art prints for their detail, glazing clarity is worth thinking about.

The honest cost breakdown

Glass is cheaper. Acrylic, depending on grade and thickness, is anywhere from 30% to 300% more expensive than equivalent glass. Premium optical acrylic costs more than premium glass.

There is also a less obvious cost issue: acrylic is petroleum-based, and its price fluctuates with oil markets. Glass is made from sand and is recyclable indefinitely without any quality loss. If the environmental angle matters to you, glass has a quieter, cleaner story.

Whether the acrylic premium is worth it depends on what you are framing and where. A 30x40cm print in a guest bedroom? Glass, no question. A 100x70cm print above your sofa with two kids and a dog in the room? The acrylic premium is the cheapest insurance policy you will ever buy.

Why shipping changes the answer

If you are buying a framed print online, you do not really get a choice, and you should not want one. Glass shipped any distance is a gamble. Couriers do not insure framed artwork at the artwork's value. They will reimburse the cost of the materials and that is it. So if a 70x100cm framed print arrives in pieces, you have lost the artwork, even if the courier pays out.

This is why every reputable framer shipping nationally uses acrylic glazing. Our framed prints ship with UV-protective acrylic glaze for exactly this reason: it survives the journey, blocks fading from sunlight, and arrives ready to hang without any of the warping or bubbling that plagues poorly assembled frames.

If you are picking a frame up locally or having one made in your town, glass becomes a reasonable option again. The risk profile changes completely once couriers are out of the picture.

A modern dining room with a single oversized abstract framed print on a sage green wall, late afternoon light

When glass is genuinely the right choice

The pro-acrylic bias in framing content is real, and it deserves some pushback. Glass is the better choice when:

  • The frame is small (under 40x50cm) and not going anywhere dangerous
  • You are framing pastels, charcoal, or graphite, where any static charge will literally pull pigment off the artwork onto the glazing
  • The room is high-traffic for dusting but low-traffic for impact (a quiet study, a formal dining room)
  • Budget is tight and you would rather put the money into a better print or a wider frame
  • You care about recyclability and material provenance

Glass is also the right call for anything you genuinely worry about scratching. A frame that gets wiped down weekly will look better in glass after five years than in acrylic, full stop.

When acrylic earns its premium

Acrylic is the right choice when:

  • The frame is large (above 60x80cm), heavy, or going on a wall with imperfect fixings
  • The artwork is being shipped, full stop
  • There are children, pets, or anyone likely to knock into it
  • The frame is going in a humid environment (bathrooms, coastal homes, kitchens) where glass condensation and frame warping become real issues
  • The print has subtle tonal detail you want to see clearly without a green cast
  • It is hanging in direct sunlight and you want the strongest UV protection you can get

This last point matters more than people realise. UV-protective acrylic blocks the wavelengths that fade prints over time. Pair that with museum-grade giclée printing and water-based pigment inks, and you have something that will look the same in fifty years as it does the day it arrives.

Not all acrylic is the same

The biggest scam in the framing world is treating "acrylic" as one thing. It is not. Thin recycled acrylic (under 2mm) yellows over time, scratches easily, and bows in large sizes. Proper 3mm virgin-resin acrylic with UV treatment is a genuinely premium material that lasts decades.

When you see a cheap frame online with "acrylic glazing," it is almost always the thin stuff. The difference is obvious the moment you handle both. If you are buying canvas prints instead of framed pieces, you sidestep this question entirely, since canvas does not use glazing at all.

The maintenance commitment, honestly

Glass takes about ten seconds to clean. Spray, wipe, done.

Acrylic takes about two minutes if you do it properly. Anti-static brush first to lift the dust off the surface (rubbing dust into acrylic is what causes most scratching). Then a damp soft microfiber, then a dry one, working in straight lines rather than circles. Never paper towels. Never ammonia. Never window cleaner unless the bottle specifically says "safe for acrylic."

If that sounds like too much, get glass. There is no shame in choosing the easier material.

A reading nook with two large framed prints side by side above a low bookshelf, warm lamp lighting in the evening

What we actually recommend

For prints up to about 50x70cm in low-risk locations: glass is fine, possibly preferable.

For prints between 50x70cm and 70x100cm: acrylic if it is being shipped, if it has fine detail, or if the wall is anywhere busy. Glass if it is staying still in a calm room.

For anything above 70x100cm: acrylic, almost always. The weight, shipping risk, and impact risk all tip the balance.

For framing pastels, charcoal, or anything where static could lift pigment: glass, no exceptions.

For anywhere humid, sunlit, or shared with small humans and animals: acrylic.

The right choice is not "always glass" or "always acrylic." It is the one that matches the size, the location, and how often you are honestly willing to clean it. Decide on those three things first and the glazing question answers itself.

A staircase landing in a well-established home, its walls painted a soft Wedgwood blue — dusty, elegant, perfectly traditional. Three provided framed art prints are arranged in a descending diagonal line following the stair's ascent from upper-left to lower-right. Each print is offset 15-20cm lower and 15-20cm to the right of the previous one, following an approximately 35-degree angle that mirrors the stair rail's slope, with the middle print at eye level on the landing. The stair rail is dark-stained walnut, its banister smooth and warm. On the narrow landing, a small walnut console with turned legs and brass pulls holds a table lamp with a brass base and cream linen drum shade, switched on, providing warm amber glow. Beside the lamp sits a family of three brass candlesticks at varying heights, the tallest slightly tarnished where fingers have gripped it. A dark wide-plank walnut floor extends across the landing, dressed with a Persian-style runner in warm neutrals with burgundy accents. Warm lamp-lit ambience mixes with soft natural light from a nearby window, cosy and enveloping, the lamp serving as the primary warmth source. The camera is straight-on, slightly below eye level, medium framing with shallow depth of field keeping the art crisp. The mood is of established warmth and unhurried domestic grace.

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