I have just read the thread on displaying quilts and thought I might pass on our experience with quilt exhibitions. Although I agree that the slanted slab would be ideal, it does not take into account the need for quilters to see the *back* of the quilt. We have had a couple of quilt exhibitions here and have always used the sleeve and rod method. we found, however, that if the quilts are mounted close to a wall, it is almost impossible to keep people from lifting the corner up to have a peek at the back. We found out very quickly that the back of a quilt is as interesting to quilters as the front. As our exhibitions have always been in conjunction with conferences on quilting, we finally had to obtain permission (during our first quilt exhibition) from the exhibitors and issue cotton gloves to all the visitors. We now hang quilts so that people can walk around them and see the back as well. My two cents worth Don Sucha Technical Coordinator The Nickle Arts Museum The University of Calgary -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [log in to unmask] http://www.ucalgary.ca/~dsucha Check out my cemetery page http://www.ucalgary.ca/~dsucha/cemetery.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~