Posts Tagged ‘art shuttle’
NEW metro to metro EXPRESS economy art shuttle!
Thursday, February 19th, 2009WHAT’S NEW?
In addition to our normal shuttle we are now offering a once monthly economy rate service between metro LA and metro SF.
This is the same museum quality climate service as our usual shuttle — no compromises there.
HOW CAN WE DO THIS?
Our economy shuttle will serve primarily gallery districts and downtown areas of each city, skipping off routes and not stopping to accomplish installs or other on site services — it is essentially an “express”. Pickup and delivery sites will need to be flexible regarding timing and be ready when we come by.
Our usual shuttle is a “local” by comparison. It makes all stops along the line, and goes to distant points as needed. Custom in nature, it honors time specific appointments, and will come back if you’re not ready on our first pass. Higher level of service = higher cost.
WHERE ?
See the maps below for areas served at the discounted rate *
*If you fall outside these areas we may be able to accommodate you however our usual (already competitive) rates will apply
PRICING – discount averages approximately 30%
EXPRESS SHUTTLE REGULAR SHUTTLE VOLUME
$ 125 minimum $ 175 minimum 15 cubic feet and below
$ 150 $ 205 20 cubic feet
$ 185 $ 250 30 cubic feet
$ 210 $ 288 40 cubic feet
above 40 cubic feet call for pricing / all rates plus 12% fuel surcharge
Reflects rate for transport only, wrapping, insurance, storage or other services are additional
HOW TO BOOK or get a quote
Use the CLICK FOR ESTIMATE tab above and fill out the form. Be sure to indicate your interest in the economy EXPRESS shuttle
OR call our shuttle coordinator, Robert Thomas:
email: robert@fineartship.com
direct line: 310 807 9587
SCHEDULE:
Our inaugural EXPRESS !!
Picks up greater Los Angeles through March 17
Delivers SF bay area March 19-20
Returns for LA deliveries week of March 23
EXPRESS ZONE maps


What is an ART SHUTTLE?
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008At FINE ART SHIPPING we specify in our estimates how a shipment will be transported, whether by air freight, ocean freight, van lines or other subcontracted trucking service, art shuttle, or exclusive use truck. The type of handing, equipment used, packing standard, security standard, and transit time is different for each of these modes of transport. In some cases the insurer of record may also have criteria that must be met in terms of security or handling. The more a customer understands the terminology the better so that there is a clear understanding of what service is being purchased and performed.
So, what is an ART SHUTTLE and why and when do I want to use one?
COMMODITIES :
Art shuttles are trucks specializing in handling artworks and sometimes antiques. They typically do not ship other commodities, general freight, or household goods. They are staffed by trained art handlers capable of packing and unpacking artworks and handling them appropriately at stops and within the truck. They are essential for transport of very high value and fragile works and are typically full service including the ability to pack, unpack, install, and insure artworks of all descriptions.
EQUIPMENT:
The art shuttle can be a tractor trailer sized truck operating nationwide or a smaller truck making more local or regional stops. Most art handling trucks are museum quality which means they have dual drivers, are climate controlled, and have air ride suspensions. Some art shuttles are not climatized or have only a single driver and in most cases the carrier will note this in their paperwork. Most art shuttle trucks also have logistics systems to assist with tying in and stabilizing packed works in the truck.
PACKING STANDARD:
Art shuttles are suitable for transport of softpacked or crated works. Most will have minimum packing standards and can upgrade packing to their standard or provide packing as needed. “Blanket wrapped” is really a furniture term and does not apply to art shuttles except in unusual circumstances. Art shuttles can be trusted to observe orientation (this way up, or ride flat) markings and will keep artworks properly oriented in transit.
ROUTES and SCHEDULING:
Most art shuttles operate on a route that is pre-scheduled between cities so that institutions and frequent shippers can plan ahead. The time in transit varies based on each shipment’s origin and delivery point. But as a rule of thumb most art shuttles take a week to two weeks to complete a route. This is therefore not a service that is going to work when items need to be moved in just a couple of days. Within their appointed schedules, also, timing may change by a day or so and customers need to have some flexibility in their receiving or releasing schedules. Most shuttles reserve the right to charge an additional fee for “first off” or “last on” or other custom timing requests.
HANDLING:
Many times customers assume that an “art shuttle” will not cross dock or handle a work more than twice: once when it is loaded and the second time when it is delivered. Well, maybe, but don’t count on it. An art shuttle is a consolidated service with items belonging to many customers commingled in the truck. As the truck makes its stops artworks are offloaded and others onloaded and space must be made accordingly. So it is likely that your shipment will be moved around, perhaps several times. Some carriers will cross dock as well which means transfer items from one truck to another at a regional hub. Art shuttles do an excellent job at this and problems are few. However if you have a shipment that can’t be handled several times or where the packing is insufficient for this, an exclusive use truck might be a safer choice.
INSURANCE:
Art shuttles can provide insurance in transit in most cases. Some have restrictions for items packed by the shipper. Insurance ,or declared valuation coverage as it is properly known, must be in place before the artwork is moved or handled. The value of the item or items must be stipulated and the coverage at the stated value will be noted on the related bill of lading. There is no “automatic” insurance except for what is essentially salvage value in some states.
SECURITY:
Most art shuttle trucks are equipped with GPS tracking devices and the trucks themselves have custom locking and other security measures installed as a part of their equipment. Many run “dual driver” trucks which means that the truck is staffed with two people, and in some cases the crew sleeps on board during cross country or longer routes. When in doubt, and if your insurer has specific requirements for coverage, the carrier involved can supply further details of their security arrangements. For ultra high value items an exclusive use truck with a courier on board, or with a security detail in accompanying vehicles, may be elected by the customer or insurer.
COST:
An art shuttle is a costly service due to the custom nature of the equipment and personnel involved. Operating costs are high and shuttles cannot cut corners without jeopardizing their reputation and the safety of the goods entrusted to their care. There is no such thing as a “discount” art shuttle. You wouldn’t want one if there were! Most shuttles charge a minimum and thereafter provide custom quotes based on the dimensions and number of the works to be transported, the locations to be served, and the precise services requested. Costs range from several hundred into the many thousands of dollars.
In figuring costs, mileage is not the most critical factor. Generally costs are most competitive between large markets. For example, it can be relatively affordable to ship a single painting from Los Angeles to New York. That same painting shipped far fewer miles from Los Angeles to a rural location in far northern California however would be considerably more expensive.
OVERVIEW:
So you want a fine art shuttle when you have a valuable or fragile artwork to ship, or one that must be climate controlled or kept in a specific orientation, or where packing, unpacking, installation or insurance is required enroute. A van line, moving company, or general trucker is not going to have trained personnel qualified to properly handle artworks and perform those related services. Art shuttles exist specifically to service this market for custom handling and transport of delicate goods.
WHEN IS AN ART SHUTTLE NOT AN ART SHUTTLE?
For purposes of comparing estimates between companies, always ask the type of service and specifically whether the quote is via art shuttle or some other type of trucking service. Most art shippers, including ourselves, will send shipments subcontracted to van lines or freight carriers as part of our normal constellation of services. There is nothing wrong with this so long as the customer understands the nature of the service and the packages and artworks themselves are suited to the chosen type of trucking and handling.
The term “art shuttle” does have a specific meaning, and it does not mean freight truck, air freight, common carrier, or van line trucking. Look for the terms “climate controlled”, “museum quality” and “air ride trucking” to be sure you are getting a true shuttle where this is needed. If an art services company won’t reveal the actual carrier or define the service in those terms then it is time to try another company who will.
Betsy Dorfman / Fine Art Shipping
Fast, Cheap & Good, or, What does this delicious halibut sandwich* have to do with art shipping?
Thursday, October 23rd, 2008FAST, CHEAP, GOOD – Pick two. Also known in our circles as the “MBA in a box” this formulation holds that of those three elements you will only get two in most business transactions. You don’t get all three. Think over the products and services you buy and it is amazing how this holds up over a range of experiences. If it’s fast and cheap it’s not good. if it is fast and good it isn’t cheap. Good and cheap it isn’t fast. Are there exceptions, sure. Hence, the fish sandwich!
The halibut sandwich in question (and photo ) is made by Canetti’s restaurant in San Pedro CA. At $8.95 breaks the mold: fast, cheap and way beyond good. Also available in cod, salmon or whatever else is fresh (see below) – and it’s grilled, not fried! Skip the tourist traps at Ports O’ Call Village down the road and drive five more minutes to this authentic place for a true bargain despite the seedy (appealingly, we think) look and the usually to be avoided nautical trappings. Normally we shun restaurants with anchors, buoys or fishnets out front, all three having proven reliable quality contra-indicators, but Canetti’s trumps the rule here as well. You may have to pour your own coffee; you may get offered a piece of someone’s birthday cake and you will have a hard time deciding between the offerings, all listed on blackboards — no menus.
You won’t leave broke or hungry. If fish isn’t your thing they have many other dishes, some, as the family name suggests, leaning towards the Italian. When was the last time you saw a meatball omelet on a menu? This is the kind of place that Calvin Trillin calls the antidote to “La Casa de la Maison House”- the “destination” restaurant of which the seafood variety is often called the something Grotto or , god help us, anything by-the-sea. Those establishments however also break the rule by managing to be slow, expensive, and awful. Take Mom to Canetti’s next Mothers day instead; she’ll be too busy eating to miss the tablecloth. Is there a place like this in your neighborhood? Send us a link! If this isn’t artist food (segue alert) what is?
Canetti’s Seafood Grotto
309 E 22nd St
San Pedro, CA 90731
(310) 831-4036
Across the parking lot and open in the early, very early, as in 5 a.m. early on weekday and Saturday mornings is a strip of wholesale fish markets that sell retail at hurry on over before we change our mind prices. They won’t sell you a quarter of a pound of anything and quality can vary but it’s worth a trip and a look see. Seals in considerable numbers hang around the water side of these docks scavenging for scraps, an extra bonus if you bring the kids. Followed up by a plate of salmon and eggs at Canetti’s there isn’t a better morning at any price.
The fast, cheap and good paradigm does have relevance (bet you guessed that) in the world of art shipping and shipping in general. In most instances expedited or faster shipping is more expensive. As is expedited packing, crating, or “first on” / “last off” service provided by art shuttles. The price structure for fine art services across the United States is in fact remarkably consistent. In most major markets all the serious contenders with museum quality facilities and services charge about the same. There are regional differences but these typically are in the 10-15% range.
When comparing bids among multiple companies our advice is to beware the entries that are either way high or way low. As there is remarkable parity in most markets the “oddball” price is a red flag. If it is fast, cheap and good it might be too good to be true. Ask for specific information as to the packing standard that will be imposed, the type of vehicle used for transport, and get all of the information including delivery schedule in writing in advance of booking. Two out of three can be bad if it is the “good” or quality part of the equation that is being shortchanged.
You will get best pricing if you call early, give accurate and complete information about the items to be shipped, and have flexibility in your shipping and receiving schedule.
* You may detect one, ok perhaps several, biases in these posts. Fish is one of them.
Betsy Dorfman/FINE ART SHIPPING
Welcome to the FAS blog
Monday, September 8th, 2008We will be updating a couple of times a week as noteworthy projects, articles, or art-related info comes our way. For those unfamiliar with our company, Fine Art Shipping is a comprehensive provider of art handling and shipping services to the professional community and to the general public. This is our 26th year in business but our very first blog! We envision this as a place where “civilians” as well as art nerds can come to see what we are up to in the very custom, and sometimes wacky, and always busy, world of art shipping.
We will provide information on art handling techniques and materials as well as links to artists, galleries, museums, exhibitions, and art events that cross our radar. We welcome feedback, suggestions for topics, and related links, always!
The other pages on this blogsite will tell you about our famous Los Angeles to San Francisco shuttle (see SHUTTLE) and give a rundown of our key players (ABOUT US). All other requests for our services information, quote requests, or art shipping queries should be directed to us through our website which offers a choice of ways to contact us and obtain such information. That is basically the “business end” and this is the fun stuff.
When is a softpack not a softpack?
Monday, September 8th, 2008At FINE ART SHIPPING we get calls and emails every day from customers who describe their painting or other framed artwork as already “softpacked” or “softwrapped.”
Generically this means, what? Well, most basically it signifies that something is not crated or slat crated or enclosed in a rigid container but is instead, softwrapped. Somehow. With something.
Over the years we have seen “softpacked” interpreted to mean:
- wrapped in a flannel shirt, with or without tape to secure (watch those buttons!)
- plastic bagged in flimsy bags sporting the dry cleaner’s name and address (my favorite)
- used, very used, occasionally chewed, plastic sheeting draped over the frame
- cardboard corners, but otherwise entirely naked
- loose in a box with an afterthought of bubble wrap settled primly over the top (schoolteacher)
- beachballed in bubble wrap, and taped tightly all around as if more couldn’t hurt, but it can (any package you have to cut to open is risky, especially when guessing at the outline of the object within)
- gift tissue paper re-used, glitter and all

Here’s an object wrapped in plastic with a foreign object taped to the outside, potentially damaging the piece – unless it’s part of the piece, on the exterior of the package, with tape all over it.
This one is wrapped in some random plastic material which is too thin to provide adequate protection.

A used box with misleading printing, taped shut after it began losing its rigidity – fine for moving some stuff across town, but not for shipping art or other valuables.

Here is a piece wrapped in thin plastic, sealed with clear tape yellowed with age (clear-on-clear is a headache for the unpacker), and way too much of it – requiring a lot of knife work to remove.

This piece is popping out of its plastic wrap, exposing it to damage and the elements.

The plastic draped over this piece is used, torn, dirty, unsealed, too thin, and has out-of-date labels.

The “diaper paper” shown here is more gentle on some objects than it may appear in the photo, but sitting uncushioned in a flimsy, open cardboard tray leaves the piece open to damage. And a delicate artwork can be hiding under those messy paper folds haphazardly taped.
Not that all “civilian” packing is inadequate: often it is quite good and serviceable for the intended mode of transport.
Our favorite example of ingenious civilian packing is the customer who tells the story of relocating a world class collection of wedgewood china back in the fifties from the rural south up to Los Angeles in her car, without breaking a single of many hundreds of items. The secret archival material? Sanitary napkins! And she invited us to imagine the look on the faces of the pharmacists as she and her grey haired husband looted the shelves of every box they could find…
This collection was many years later packed and crated by FINE ART SHIPPING and sent off to auction at Sotheby’s London. It contained items so rare that the only similar or matching ones are in possession of the royal family.
There is no one single industry standard for “softpacking”, although there are basic guidelines and understanding of what this means. The condition, medium, value and fragility of the item itself along with consideration of the intended mode of transport are key ingredients; there is no one solution for an entire class of artworks.
But by and large a “softpacked” painting to a professional means that the contents, if a flatwork, is wrapped with a moisture barrier, then packed into a custom cardboard box that is created from sheets of cardboard cut to size to surround the artwork on all sides and edges. This is then taped closed and labeled as to the “face” side and correct orientation. This is also referred to as a “slipcase”.
Slipcases may have other ingredients such as:
- foam lining along the bottom of the pack to protect a heavy frame from its own weight
- wrapping of the artwork itself in glassine or dartek archival materials
- double cardboard over the “face” of the package for added protection
- collar wrapping or “shadow” boxing to allow for air circulation and/or to keep packing material from touching the face of textured, damp or unstable artwork
- glasskin taping over real glass to avoid damage to the artwork if the glass breaks in transit (glasskin is essentially oversized masking tape with an easily removable adhesive)

The elegance of a basic cardboard slipcase…

When traveling in the custody of professional art handlers, even a large slipcase like this can be a safe and economical alternative to crating.

Softpacks can take many shapes, and manufactured, double-wall cartons are often the best option for the job.

…even when a little modification is required.

Large or grouped softpacks are often palletized for greater protection in transit.

The custom pallet is a stronger, leaner and more efficient alternative to standard shipping pallets.

As with crating, the most important part of a softpack is the part that isn’t seen until it arrives safely at the destination.

Cardboard isn’t the only material used for rigid softpacks. When an object has special needs but crating isn’t an option, there is still a variety of archival and alternative packing materials to choose from.
It is important to let your art handler know exactly how your artworks will be wrapped when received. “Softpacked” can mean anything, and often does. If your carrier assumes this means slipcased, and you are operating in flannel shirt mode, this can create risk for the object if the service picking up is not prepared to further wrap the artwork or to return it to a warehouse where this can be done.
There are some prefabricated boxes which can be suitable for packing artworks and some which are eminently NOT suitable: we will have fun with those in a future post. Happy packing!
Betsy Dorfman



