Wow, fantastic.We were in need of a very narrow bathroom mirror to fit over an ugly painted plywood panel door for a built-in medicine cabinet. I could have purchased a custom cut mirror from a specialty place for about ten bucks more, or find a way to mount this guy up.The mirror has a thin -- perhaps 1/4 inch, probably less -- bevel around the edges, just peeking through the "clamshell" style tubular steel frame. It's simply taped on to a ladder-style frame, which has two protruding tabs about midway up that are the connection point for the "leg" that is visible in the stock photo.If you're looking to wall mount this (and judging by the questions, some of you are), there are two options: One is to go through the trouble of detaching the mirror glass from the ladder frame (the backside frame, not the frame around the edges). The other is to cut off the two steel "tabs" that connect to the "leg" (using a Dremel), leaving you with the mirror attached to a flat, wall-mountable ladder frame. Either way, you'll have to get creative with mounting options: double sided tape, homemade brackets, or in my case, sheet metal screws through the back of the door panel into the ladder frame.I really do like the quality of this glass. The thin bevel is just nice, the steel frame is dressed up compared to the thin, flat wood frames found on most full length mirrors at the likes of Target, BBBeyond, etc., and it **seems** to be a higher quality glass than those cheaper mirrors, although that could just be because this one is securely backed by stout steel.I did test this out in its intended form as a floor mirror for just a few days prior to modifying it, and found that at at my height of six feet tall, this wasn't entirely suitable for seeing the whole me, although it did offer a good perspective on how my pants hemline interfaced with my various shoes -- from a vantage I just can't see in a vertically mounted wall mirror.But alas, vertical it now is.