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"I Want a Portrait of Someone I Love. Where Do I Begin?"

There is something deeply human about wanting to preserve a face.

Not a photograph — those are everywhere, disposable, scrolled past in seconds. A painting is different. It slows you down. It demands attention. It says: this person mattered enough to be made by hand.

Commissioning a custom oil portrait is one of the most intimate things you can do — and one of the most misunderstood. People assume it's complicated, expensive, or reserved for a different era. It isn't. It's simply a conversation between you and an artist, and it begins with a single message.

Here is what that conversation looks like — and everything you need to know before you send it.

First, choose your subject wisely.

A portrait can capture anyone: your mother at seventy, your daughter at two, your dog who has seen you through everything. The subject doesn't need to be glamorous. They need to be loved. That love — your love for them — is exactly what a good artist will put on the canvas.

If you're commissioning a portrait as a gift, consider the person who will receive it. What image of themselves would move them? A formal pose, or a candid moment? A single figure, or the whole family gathered on a Sunday afternoon?

Then, find the right reference photo.

This is where most clients feel uncertain — and where the outcome is truly decided. A good reference photo isn't a professional headshot (though those work beautifully). It's a photograph where the face is clearly lit, the expression is alive, and you recognize the person you love when you look at it.

Natural light is your best friend. Avoid harsh flash, heavy shadows across the face, or images taken from below. If you have several options, send them all — a good artist will help you choose.

Reach out, and don't be afraid to ask questions.

When you contact an artist, tell them: who the subject is, what size you're imagining, when you need it, and — if you have one — a sense of the feeling you want the painting to carry. Warmth? Elegance? A particular moment in time?

A custom portrait begins with a real conversation. You're not placing an order for furniture. You're asking someone to look at your loved one the way you do.

Understand the timeline.

Oil painting takes time — and that's a feature, not a flaw. Depending on the complexity of the piece, expect anywhere from two to six weeks from approval to delivery. If you're commissioning a portrait as a birthday gift or holiday present, build in extra time. Rush requests are sometimes possible, but the painting that's been given space to breathe will always be the better one.

Trust the process — and stay involved.

Most artists will send you work-in-progress photos at key stages. This is your moment to say the hair is slightly darker than I imagined or could the background be softer? A portrait commission is a collaboration. Your input is not an imposition — it's essential.

When it arrives, you will understand.

There is a moment, when a commissioned portrait arrives and you hang it on your wall, when something settles. The room changes. The person in the painting looks back at you — not frozen, not posed, but present in a way photographs rarely manage.

That is what you commissioned. Not just a painting. A piece of time, made permanent.

Ready to begin? Reach out — and bring your favorite photo.
2026-06-01 12:47