We’ve seen a lot of “smart art frames” at CES over the years. Most of them feel like glorified digital photo frames in turtlenecks. However, there’s one that feels genuinely different: Fraimic, and I say that as someone deeply skeptical of this category.
The pitch appears quite compelling at first. Speak a prompt into the device, and its built-in mic sends the command to OpenAI’s GPT Image 2.0, which then generates full-color artwork that lands on a Spectra 6 E Ink display.
What makes it stand out from competitors like Aura and SwitchBot?
Normally, you’d take out your phone to do that with a regular digital photo frame, but with Fraimic, you just have to tap, speak, and watch something appear on your wall that looks more like paint on paper than pixels on a screen.
The device also features an accelerometer that determines whether it’s oriented in portrait or landscape.
Coming to the competition part, Aura Frames require a subscription and don’t let you swap out the surrounding frame. SwitchBot frames, on the other hand, do not support voice generation. Fraimic does both, while keeping your prompts and images private by default.
The company offers you 100 free AI generations per year and also provides access to thousands of public-domain works from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. A REST API even opens it up to smart home integration for developers.

So why is the price such a tough pill to swallow?
Because $499 for the 13.3-inch and $1,499 for the 31.5-inch sounds a bit too steep. Aura’s comparable frame runs around the same for the smaller size, but it also offers buyers smaller options that cost even less. Switchbot sells a 31.5-inch variant that costs $200 less.
It’s worth noting that the 13.3-inch ships now, but the 31.5-inch shows a July 2026 shipping date on the official website. To make the brand’s case, it did grab a Red Dot Award: Product Design 2026. But for a first-gen device from a Chicago startup, it appears to be asking a lot of your wallet.
To me, Fraimic appears to be sitting in an awkward but interesting spot. It’s too expensive to be an impulse buy, too genuinely capable to dismiss. Anyway, we’ll reserve our final verdict for later, when we actually get our hands on it.





