Vintage Specimen Frames – 7 Red Rubber Stamps
**Vintage Specimen Frames – 7 Trimmed Red Rubber Stamps**
Reintroduced from the Innovative Stamp Creations archives, **Vintage Specimen Frames** is a versatile collection of seven deeply etched red rubber frame stamps inspired by traditional photographic slide mounts.
Rather than purchasing separate slide mounts whenever inspiration strikes, these reusable frame stamps allow you to create the look again and again—in seven different sizes and window styles.
Use the open frames to feature miniature stamped portraits, botanicals, moths, insects, photographs, handwritten notes, fabric fragments, vellum, acetate, and tiny collage compositions.
>Approximate Frame Sizes
• 3½" × 3½"
• 3⅛" × 2½"
• 2 9/16" × 1 15/16"
• 2" × 1¾"
• 2" × 2" — three individual frame designs
The collection includes square, rectangular, circular, oval, and softly rounded window formats, giving you multiple options for creating specimen-style focal images and dimensional layered pieces.
Perfect for:
• Junk journals and handmade journals
• Vintage specimen slides
• Mixed-media collage
• Artist trading cards
• Tags, pockets, envelopes, and journaling cards
• Framed portraits, botanicals, photographs, and insects
• Fabric, vellum, acetate, and miniature collage windows
The fine outlines are intentionally clean and understated so the image inside the frame remains the focal point. Stamp directly onto paper, layer a frame over another stamped image, or carefully remove the inner opening to create a working window.
Deeply etched red rubber provides crisp impressions and dependable ink transfer, making this a lasting studio tool you can return to for years of creative projects.
**Collection:** Vintage Specimen Frames
**Stamp count:** 7 individual designs
**Material:** Deeply etched red rubber
**Finish:** Individually trimmed
**Retail price:** $17.50
Please note: The product preview has been reduced for display. Refer to the approximate measurements above for the actual stamp sizes.
Vintage slide-mount styling. Endless specimen possibilities.