Black Sunday drawing damaged from shipping

Every Artist's Nightmare — And How I Fixed It

Posted by Kris Horton on

If you've been following along, you already know the story behind my FDNY Black Sunday memorial drawing — one of the most meaningful and emotionally significant commissions I've ever taken on.

What I didn't share was what happened after it was finished.

Buckle up.

 

How It Started

Jeff Cool had commissioned me for this deeply personal piece — four fallen FDNY firefighters in front of Heaven's Gate, with three survivors looking on. After months of work the drawing was finished, sealed, and ready to go home to Jeff.

I rolled it carefully between two pieces of thick paper, packaged it in one of those heavy duty tube mailers — the kind that could knock someone out if you swung it hard enough — and dropped it at FedEx.

I sent Jeff the tracking number and waited.

 

The Delivery

It didn't arrive on the expected day. Then it arrived a day late.

Looking like this.

Black Sunday drawing by Kris Horton damaged after shipping

The tube was broken. The drawing was ripped, creased, and wrinkled. And the FedEx driver was going to leave it on the doorstep without a word — Jeff happened to see him and stopped him. Not that it made much difference. The response from the driver, and later from FedEx customer service, was essentially the same: couldn't care less.

Jeff refused the package. The drawing went back to FedEx and I genuinely thought it was gone forever.

Jeff spent hours on the phone trying to get answers. I told him to give me a little time and let's see what happens.

About two weeks later — the drawing came back to me. Taped up, but in roughly the same condition as when Jeff had seen it. Not worse. That felt like a small miracle.

 

How I Fixed It

I wasn't ready to give up. I did my research, made a plan, and told Jeff I was going to try to save it — but that if it didn't work I would redraw the entire piece from scratch.

Here's exactly what I did:

Step 1: Removing the Wrinkles & Creases

  • Place the artwork face down on a clean surface over a piece of sketch or copy paper
  • Lightly mist the back of the paper with water using a fine mist spray bottle held 6–8 inches away. Don't over-wet
  • Cover with another piece of sketch or newsprint paper, then sandwich between two smooth flat panels — I used aluminum, but anything solid works
  • Stack heavy books or weights on top to press flat
  • Every 2 hours, swap the damp sketch paper for dry paper and replace the weights. Repeat for 4–6 cycles until the paper no longer feels damp
  • Once dry, place fresh dry paper underneath, replace the board and weights, and leave for 24–72 hours until completely dry

The most important thing: the water needs to evaporate evenly so the paper fibers contract at the same rate. Rushing this step will make things worse.

 

books stacked on top of Black Sunday painting as part of the repair

 

Step 2: Repairing the Tears

I used archival repair tape — specifically a very thin mending tissue used by conservators to repair important documents and books. It's pressure sensitive, non-yellowing, removable with solvents, and pH neutral.

  • Cut the tape to size and apply it along the tear on the reverse side of the paper
  • Burnish it down with a bone folder — I wanted to be absolutely sure it was secure
  • Avoid touching the sticky side with your fingers — acidic fingerprints can cause damage over time. Trim the end you're holding or use tweezers
  • You may need to lightly draw over the tear on the front to make it disappear completely

 

 

Step 3: Mounting for Stability

I used spray adhesive to mount the repaired drawing onto a smooth aluminum panel slightly larger than the piece itself. This added stability and made sure it would never shift or wrinkle again.

 

Black Sunday drawing mounted after de-wrinkle and repair

 

Step 4: Professional Framing

After everything I had been through with this piece I was not about to take any more chances. I took it to Kat's Custom Picture Framing in San Antonio — and Kat was absolutely amazing. She treated it with the care it deserved.


 

Black Sunday drawing framed

 

Shipping It — The Right Way This Time

Once framed I went to UPS. Definitely not FedEx.

I packaged it like my life depended on it. Extra padding, larger outer box, protection on every single side. I have learned my lesson the hard way.

When you get right up close you can see a few small areas of imperfection. But step back a foot and they disappear completely. Jeff was pleased — and more importantly, he was able to keep the original drawing. That mattered more than anything.

 

What I Want You to Take Away

If you're an artist shipping your work — or if you've ever had a piece damaged in transit — here's what I learned:

  • Package it better than you think you need to. Then add more padding.
  • Wrinkled artwork can be fixed — don't panic
  • Torn paper can be repaired — archival mending tissue is your best friend
  • Find a framer you trust completely and let them do their job

 

And if you've had a shipping nightmare of your own — I'd love to hear how you handled it in the comments. 🎨

 

XO, Kris

 

References:

 

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about kris

I'm a South Texas artist creating warm, meaningful artwork inspired by nature, the places we love, and the pets who steal our hearts. Every piece I make is created to bring joy, comfort, and a true feeling of home into your space.
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