Three Key Takeaways
- The Antique Gold and Black frame's two-tone profile, a broad matte black face paired with a brushed antique gold channel, delivers gallery-weight authority and warm tradition in a single, considered design that bridges classical and contemporary interiors with equal confidence.
- Handcrafted in Haverhill, Massachusetts, from 99% recycled composite in a solar-powered, carbon-neutral facility, this frame reflects a standard of craft and sustainability that matches the intention behind every other deliberate choice in a well-designed home.
- The moment this frame settles onto the wall, the room does the same, creating a quiet, grounded harmony that guests feel before they can name it, and that the homeowner carries with them long after the first installation day.
The Weight of Something Earned
There is a specific quality that rooms built over the years carry. Not the rooms assembled in a season from a single catalog, but the rooms that accumulate slowly, deliberately, piece by piece. The lamp was chosen for its warm glow, not just its shape. The credenza that took three years to find because nothing else had the right grain. The hardware changed twice before it was right.
These rooms have a quality of settledness. Everything in them has earned its place.
The Antique Gold and Black frame from Deco TV Frames was made for exactly this kind of room.
Its broad matte-black face quietly absorbs light, lending gallery authority to everything within it. The brushed antique-gold channel running along its edges carries the kind of warmth that only a deliberately aged finish can impart. Ridged and luminous, it catches lamplight the way aged brass does, not with flash, but with depth. In the morning, it reads with quiet precision. By evening, under warm ambient light, it deepens into a glow.
This is not a frame that announces itself. It belongs.
When You Want a Finishing Touch
The room is already beautiful. The art on display glows. The art you love fills the screen, and the content is stunning. But there is something the composition has not yet said with full confidence.
Not because anything is wrong. Because one final, meaningful choice remains.
The homeowner who reaches this moment knows the feeling well. They have made enough careful decisions to recognize when one more is needed. They are not looking for a remedy. They are looking for the element that brings the whole thing into harmony, the way the right frame around a canvas makes everything in the room settle into its correct relationship with everything else.
The Antique Gold and Black frame is that element.
It adds the physical weight and cultural authority that gives the display the same presence as the framed artwork hanging elsewhere in the room. The broad face grounds. The gold channel warms. The composition reads as cohesive, balanced, and fully intentional from across the room and up close.
What changes is not the room. What changes is the register in which the room speaks.
Where Art and Innovation Speak the Same Language
Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs are already art. They were designed that way: a glare-free display, a slim bezel that mounts flush to the wall, Art Mode that presents artwork with quiet, gallery-worthy grace. The Frame Pro adds Neo QLED picture quality, a Wireless One Connect Box, and Samsung Vision AI. These are not televisions dressed up to look like something else. They are displays that take seriously the idea that technology and art belong together.
Deco TV Frames is built on the same conviction.
For twenty years, Deco has worked from the belief that a frame is not a product. It is an act of attention. A declaration that the display inside deserves a surround chosen with the same intention as every other object in the room.
The Antique Gold and Black frame extends that philosophy into its most formally resonant expression. The broad face carries the stillness of a gallery wall. The antique gold channel carries centuries of fine framing tradition. Together, they give Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs a physical voice in the room's design language, one that speaks fluently alongside aged brass hardware, dark-stained wood, and layered textiles without competing with any of them.
The Character of This Finish
To describe the Antique Gold and Black profile without naming its colors is to describe authority softened by warmth.
The broad face absorbs rather than reflects, drawing the eye inward toward the artwork, as a gallery wall focuses attention on a canvas. It does not call attention to itself. It holds.
The gold channel is something different. Imagine the surface of an old museum frame in a European gallery, one that has aged into something richer than it started. The finish along the edges carries a luminous warmth while the wide central field holds a deep, quiet stillness. The ridging along the channel gives it a tactile quality you can almost feel from across the room. A sense of craft and dimension that flat finishes cannot replicate.
In warm ambient light, the gold deepens. Near an amber lamp, it glows. In cooler natural daylight, the ridging becomes more visible, more structural, lending the profile a sharper, gallery-authoritative presence. This dual behavior makes the frame feel alive without being decorative. It rewards careful placement and returns the attention investment every time the light in the room shifts.
At three inches wide and one and one-eighth inches deep, the profile has real physical presence. This is not a thin accent. It is a surround that gives the display genuine depth on the wall, the way a canvas looks inside a substantial museum frame rather than a standard one.
Handcrafted with Integrity
Every section of this frame begins in Haverhill, Massachusetts, in a solar-powered, carbon-neutral 65,000-square-foot facility where near-zero-waste manufacturing is not a policy but a practice. Waste from production is recycled back into new molding. The Antique Gold and Black frame is crafted from 99% recycled composite material, engineered for long-term durability in residential environments.
This is not sustainability as a footnote. It is sustainability as a standard.
The antique gold and black finish carries the warmth and visual depth of traditional gilded framing. The recycled composite beneath it reflects a genuinely modern approach to premium design, one where the material tells as coherent a story as the finish above it.
A lifetime warranty is available to every customer who wants the assurance to match the investment. For the homeowner who buys things that age well and mean something, that warranty is less a safety net than a confirmation that the frame was made with exactly their standard in mind.
An Intentional Addition
Before the Antique Gold and Black frame, the room is already beautiful. The display shows art they love. The wall holds. But the surroundings around the display are understated against the richness of the space, and the display, for all its luminosity, reads as thinner than everything surrounding it.
Then the frame is in place.
The warm gold channel catches the ambient light from the nearby lamp. The broad face settles into the wall with quiet gravity. The display is no longer just a screen showing art. It is art, housed in the way art has always deserved to be housed. The room settles. The wall settles. The homeowner steps back and feels something quieter and more satisfying than excitement.
Recognition.
The kind that arrives when something goes from almost right to exactly right. Not because anything was wrong before. Because this was always the intended version of the space.
In Conversation with Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs
Art Mode on Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs already delivers something genuinely beautiful. It was designed to present artwork with the quiet grace of a gallery, and it does. The Antique Gold and Black frame does not improve on that. It joins it.
The broad face creates a deep visual boundary around the display, drawing the eye inward toward the artwork, as a gallery wall draws attention to a canvas. The warm gold channel along the edges echoes the tonal qualities of classical paintings and illuminated prints, giving Art Mode the ceremonial surround that fine art has always carried.
Before displaying art, two quick settings adjustments inside Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs keep the display performing beautifully at all hours. Press the Power button to enter Art Mode, then press Home. Scroll to Art Mode Options and select Sleep Options. Turn Sleep After off and Night Mode off. Confirm that Art Effect mode is enabled. That is everything. The display is ready, and so is the frame.
What follows is a wall that feels less like a television displaying art and more like art that happens to move.
The Discerning Homeowner
This frame is for the person who thinks in terms of rooms, not individual objects.
They describe their style as collected, layered, or classic-modern. Their home includes pieces with provenance and intention: an heirloom mirror above a fireplace, a leather club chair with warm hardware, and linen drapery chosen for its movement. They buy things that improve with age. They notice when something is made with genuine intention, and when it is not.
The guest who pauses in front of this frame is also that person. They have stood in well-curated galleries. They know the difference between a print placed in a cheap surround and a painting housed in a frame chosen to honor it. They register the authority of the black face and the warmth of the brushed gold channels as something more considered than a standard accessory.
No explanation is needed. Recognition is immediate.
For the homeowner, that recognition lands as confirmation. The conversation that follows is never about the television. It is always about the art, the room, and the person who put it together with such evident care.
Design as a Statement of Values
What this frame communicates goes beyond aesthetics.
It says that the person living here moves through the world with taste and patience. That they collect rather than accumulate. That they understand the right surroundings elevate everything within it, and that a considered choice made once is worth more than many casual ones made quickly.
The Antique Gold and Black frame is not for everyone. That is precisely its appeal. It is a specific, confident choice made by someone who is not decorating for trends but for permanence. The antique gold channels do not compete with the art it surrounds. It honors it. The broad face does not demand attention. It holds the space open for the display within.
Guests who notice fine things notice this frame. Their recognition lands on the homeowner not as praise but as affirmation, the quiet confirmation that every deliberate choice in the room has been seen, understood, and respected.
The Room That Has Always Known What It Wanted
The Antique Gold and Black frame asks to be seen. Not loudly. Not urgently. But with the particular confidence of something that has always belonged where it has been placed.
Installation is part of that confidence. The four Premiere Collection sections snap together magnetically on the ground first, forming a complete assembled frame before Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs are ever touched. That assembled frame then lifts as a single unit and snaps onto the TV using hooks and latches, locking into place with a firm, satisfying click. No tools. Installs in less than two minutes. The process is as unhesitating as the design itself.
The moment the frame is on the wall, the room settles into the version of itself the homeowner always intended.
Not excitement. No relief. Settledness.
The low-grade awareness that something was still being decided quietly resolves. The gold catches the lamplight. The face holds steady. Nothing competes. Everything belongs. And, standing in the doorway before leaving for the day, the homeowner glances back and feels the particular, grounded pride of someone who made exactly the right call.
Built from Conviction: The Story Behind Deco TV Frames
There is a frame hanging in a Massachusetts condo that started everything.
In 2002, Kevin Hancock accidentally placed an electrical outlet above his television during a renovation. Rather than expose the mistake, he built a frame to cover it. Practical at first. Then something else. Something his college friend noticed years later during a visit and admired without reservation. That offhand comment, genuine and unhurried, was the spark.
Frame My TV was born on July 18, 2006. Not with investment capital or a launch strategy, but from a garage, then a dining room, while Kevin waited tables and bartended to keep the business breathing. The early years were humble and patient, built entirely on the conviction that a beautifully framed display was not a niche idea. It was an inevitable one.
The first confirmation came from The Breakers Hotel in Palm Beach, Florida, which selected his frames for all 540 rooms. Then, in 2019, three customers asked about Samsung's The Frame and The Frame Pro TVs. Kevin's team devised a magnetic design and secured a last-minute trade show booth directly across from Samsung. The crowd's response was overwhelming. Kevin called his mother in tears.
During COVID, Kevin and his right-hand man, Randy, lived inside the facility, unpacking and shipping frames alone while the world stood still. That period of resilience became part of the frame's identity, proof that the people behind the product understood permanence and conviction in a personal way.
In February 2026, Deco opened a brand new 65,000-square-foot solar-powered, carbon-neutral facility in Haverhill, Massachusetts. A home built for the next chapter of a business that began as a mistake turned into something beautiful.
2026 marks Deco TV Frames' 20th anniversary. Two decades of handcrafted frames, each one a finishing touch made with intention.











