Vinyl Record Holder & Stand: Display Your Collection
Display your vinyl, not just store it.
Holders, stands and wall mounts turn a collection into a gallery. Show the cover you're playing, keep every sleeve in reach, and make your listening space look the part.
4.9/5 · 400+ Verified Reviews · Quality-inspected in Madrid
A hidden collection is half-enjoyed.
Records stacked spine-in are music you forget you own. Put the artwork on display — on a shelf, a stand or the wall — and selection becomes intentional: every cover visible, every album within reach, the room better for it.
Six ways to put it on show.
Floating wall shelves
Slim ledges that hold records spine-out or front-facing. A 48-inch shelf mounted into studs safely holds 60–80 records — clean lines, big impact.
Wall peg systems
Individual mounts that frame one cover at a time, gallery-style. Perfect for a rotating wall of your current favourites.
Leaning floor stands
A stand like the Break props a stack at an angle so the front cover is always on show. No wall holes, fully portable.
Upright floor cabinets
Solid-wood cubes that store the bulk spine-out and double as a surface. Display and capacity in one piece.
Now-playing displays
A small stand or ledge by the turntable to hold the sleeve you're spinning — the record always has a home while it plays.
Flying V wall mounts
Steel wall mounts that display the front cover and hold the rest behind it. The statement piece for your most-loved records.
Every cover visible, every album in reach.
Mix the types — wall mounts for the favourites, a stand for now-playing, cabinets for the archive. Great display makes choosing a record part of the ritual.
Stand it, mount it, frame it.
A leaning stand, a wall mount and a single-sleeve frame — three ways to put the artwork front and centre. All shipped worldwide from Madrid.
Displaying vinyl, answered.
A 48-inch shelf properly mounted into studs safely holds about 60–80 records (roughly 11 kg). Don't exceed this without extra supports — anchor into studs, never just plasterboard.
A wide-based stand like the Break is designed for stability, but any tall floor-standing display near young children should be wall-anchored for safety.
Not recommended. Horizontal stacking presses the spines and makes selection tedious. Vertical, spine-out (or front-facing on a ledge) is both ergonomic and protective.
Glass helps with dust, sunlight and humidity but cuts the visual impact and adds weight. Use it selectively — for valuable or favourite records near a window.
LED strips above the shelves highlight the spines without adding heat. Avoid incandescent bulbs — the heat warps covers and fades colours over time.
More display & storage.
Turn storage into a gallery.
Steel stands, wall mounts and frames — built to put your collection on show. Designed in Spain, shipped worldwide.
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