Frame to Please

Frame to Please Custom picture framing to please your needs We are a full service frame shop that specializes in customer service.

Any object of art can be framed in many ways but finding the perfect fit for your home decor and budget is our passion.

I’m having so much fun with AI. As you might know we recently lost Lula so you can imagine how special this image is!If ...
02/12/2026

I’m having so much fun with AI. As you might know we recently lost Lula so you can imagine how special this image is!
If you have a special image like this but don’t want to invest a ton of money we can use what we have in stock for a 3”x5” for under $50!!
Opps gotta run Valentine Day is calling me !!
📞💘🖼️!!! ☝️🥰

Are you excited as me!! These journals are going to hit the shelves by Feb!Sharpen those quills!!!♥️♥️✍️♥️♥️💯♥️♥️
01/07/2026

Are you excited as me!!
These journals are going to hit the shelves by Feb!
Sharpen those quills!!!
♥️♥️✍️♥️♥️💯♥️♥️

Good morning and Happy New Year 🎊 Today I’m going to share some tips for framing and decorating!! Always bring photos of...
01/02/2026

Good morning and Happy New Year 🎊
Today I’m going to share some tips for framing and decorating!!
Always bring photos of where you would like to hang your artwork!!
And then my imagination runs wild!!
Here I was on a budget.
So I framed the antique mirror with a beautiful Italian frame. The artwork it really tile samples that I obsconded from Tiled Interiors (next door to me) Donna has the most unique tile!! So a little dumpster diving was totally worth it!!
So what do you all think?? Balance!! It’s all about balance !!

What is so special about this sandwich?? Despite it being delicious and the person that bought it for me remembered that...
12/02/2025

What is so special about this sandwich?? Despite it being delicious and the person that bought it for me remembered that I’m a vegetarian!!
But most importantly she remembered all the years and all the calls we went on as EMT’s for the Red Bank first aid!! And we did so as only two mothers could do!!
This person my Captain,my mentor my life long friend!! Shelia Nolen We covered all the sick and injured in Red Bank in ways that only two mothers could!!
Shelia Nolen and I became friends while being two female EMTs on the Red Bank First Aid!!
Seriously the stories we could tell you!! Shelia would call me and say that she could watch the kids if I could take the call and vice versa!! An unconventional way to raise kids but it is true it takes a village!! And that still rings true today as she helps me convalesce!
It’s was many years of service for both Shelia and myself, and not one minute wasted!!!

An absolute must read!!  Pour yourself a cup of coffee/tea!!!
11/24/2025

An absolute must read!!
Pour yourself a cup of coffee/tea!!!

Her father forbade any of his 12 children to marry. She married in secret, went home, ate dinner like nothing happened—then disappeared forever.
London, 1840s.
Elizabeth Barrett was 39 years old and dying—or so everyone believed.
For years, she'd been trapped in her room at 50 Wimpole Street, an invalid confined to a sofa, surviving on morphine and laudanum.
Her spine had been damaged in a horse accident at 15. Or maybe it was her lungs. Or her nerves. The doctors couldn't agree.
But they all agreed she wouldn't last much longer.
The Tyrant
Her father, Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett, controlled everything.
A tyrant whose wealth came from Jamaican sugar plantations built on slavery, he ruled his twelve children with absolute authority.
His most rigid rule: None of them were permitted to marry. Ever.
He never explained why. He simply declared it, and that was enough.
The Poet
So Elizabeth wrote poetry instead.
Extraordinary poetry that made her one of the most celebrated poets in England—more famous, at the time, than Tennyson.
But she wrote it from a prison of silk and morphine, watched over by a father who loved her brilliance but refused to let her live.
Then a letter arrived.
The Correspondence
"I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett," wrote Robert Browning, a younger poet whose work she admired.
She wrote back.
That single exchange became 574 letters over 20 months.
Robert wrote to her constantly—passionate, philosophical, playful letters that treated her not as an invalid but as an equal. As a woman whose mind was as alive as her body was supposedly dying.
He asked to visit. She refused. She was too ill, too reclusive, too ashamed of her weakness.
He persisted.
The Meeting
When they finally met in May 1845, something shifted.
Robert didn't see a dying woman in a darkened room.
He saw Elizabeth—brilliant, fierce, trapped.
He saw someone who needed to be freed.
He proposed. She said it was impossible.
Her father would never allow it. And even if they could escape his control, she was too sick to be anyone's wife. She'd be a burden. A responsibility. A tragedy waiting to happen.
Robert's response: "You're the strongest person I know."
The Secret
They began planning in secret.
On September 12, 1846, Elizabeth Barrett walked to St. Marylebone Parish Church with her maid.
Robert Browning met her there.
They married in an empty church with only two witnesses.
Then Elizabeth went home.
She walked back into 50 Wimpole Street, ate dinner with her family, went to her room, and acted like nothing had happened.
For a week, she maintained the fiction. The dutiful invalid daughter, too weak to leave her sofa.
Then, one night, she simply left.
The Escape
She took her loyal spaniel Flush, a few belongings, and Robert Browning's hand.
They crossed the English Channel and disappeared into Europe.
Her father disowned her instantly. He returned all her letters unopened. He never spoke her name again.
When she tried to reconcile years later, he refused.
But Elizabeth? She discovered she wasn't dying after all.
The Transformation
In Florence, something miraculous happened.
The sun. The warmth. The freedom from her father's house. And Robert—who treated her not as fragile porcelain but as the warrior she'd always been.
Her health improved. Dramatically.
The woman who'd been bedridden for years began walking. Traveling. Living.
In 1849, at age 43—an age when doctors had long since written her off—she gave birth to their son, Robert Wiedeman Barrett Browning, called Pen.
And she wrote. God, did she write.
The Poetry
"Sonnets from the Portuguese" became some of the most famous love poems in the English language.
Not because they were sweet—but because they were true.
"How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach..."
These weren't poems about being rescued.
They were poems about discovering she'd never needed rescuing—just freedom.
The Revolutionary
Elizabeth didn't just write love poetry.
In Italy, she became politically active, passionately supporting Italian unification.
She wrote "Casa Guidi Windows" about Italian revolution.
She wrote "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point"—a searing anti-slavery poem, despite her family's wealth coming from plantations.
She was considered for Poet Laureate—nearly unheard of for a woman.
Robert never overshadowed her. He celebrated her work, championed her voice, stood beside her as an equal partner in art and life.
Fifteen Years
They had 15 years together.
Fifteen years she was never supposed to have.
On June 29, 1861, Elizabeth Barrett Browning died in Robert's arms in Florence.
She was 55. She'd outlived every doctor's prediction by decades.
Her father had died three years earlier, still refusing to forgive her.
But Elizabeth had stopped waiting for his forgiveness long before that.
What She Proved
Elizabeth Barrett Browning proved:
That sometimes the illness isn't in your body—it's in the cage you're kept in.
That the most radical act can be simply choosing to leave.
That love isn't about being saved—it's about being seen as you actually are, and choosing to live accordingly.
The Truth
She walked out of her father's house at 40 years old, supposedly too sick to survive without his protection.
She lived another 15 years—traveling, writing, raising a child, changing literature, supporting revolutions.
The most dangerous thing her father ever told her was that she was too weak to survive without him.
The bravest thing she ever did was prove him wrong.
________________________________________
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
March 6, 1806 – June 29, 1861
Poet. Revolutionary. Survivor.
She didn't need to be saved. She just needed to be free.

Good morning!! Here’s a nice feel good video. Can you feel the love?🥰 I
10/03/2025

Good morning!! Here’s a nice feel good video.
Can you feel the love?🥰 I

Still smiling from this! Mike had the incredible opportunity to meet and chat with legendary rock photographer Elliot La...
06/24/2025

Still smiling from this! Mike had the incredible opportunity to meet and chat with legendary rock photographer Elliot Landy on Saturday .You can just see the excitement!
> They had an amazing time talking all about the iconic Woodstock days and, of course, their shared love for vintage cameras. What a special moment – especially with that classic Dylan shot in the background! ✨
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I’m hiring this guy for sure 👍!!!Happy Monday folks!!
06/16/2025

I’m hiring this guy for sure 👍!!!
Happy Monday folks!!

Talk about a glow -up🌟🌟This original Bugs Bunny finally got a frame that it deserves !The 90’s called they can keep the ...
04/30/2025

Talk about a glow -up🌟🌟
This original Bugs Bunny finally got a frame that it deserves !
The 90’s called they can keep the old one 😉!
So happy to see it vibing perfectly next to the Mike Kupka original Disney painting.
What do you think of the new look?👀

Mission accomplished! 🙌 We recently helped a customer put the finishing touch on his music room. Framing his grandfather...
04/06/2025

Mission accomplished! 🙌 We recently helped a customer put the finishing touch on his music room. Framing his grandfather's wartime artwork perfectly completed the vibe he was aiming for. It's amazing how the right frame can bring a space and its stories together. What's inspiring your home decor?

Luna Luna in NYC was an absolute must-see! It was like stepping into a surreal, nostalgic carnival created by some of th...
03/17/2025

Luna Luna in NYC was an absolute must-see! It was like stepping into a surreal, nostalgic carnival created by some of the most influential artists of our time, back when they were just starting out. 🎪 From Keith Haring's carousel to Salvador Dalí's pavilion, every piece sparks that childlike sense of wonder. It's a reminder to let go and embrace the playful side of life. Go embrace your inner child today✨

Address

2 Bridge Avenue
Red Bank, NJ

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+17327418062

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