Hilltop Houses - unframed 8.5" x 11" giclee print

$25.00

Sunset's passing, and the lights are coming on in all the little houses nestled on the hillside.

This is an unmatted open-edition giclée* print of one of my original multi-media drawings (ink, pastel & colored pencil), from a series of house drawings. The print quality is phenomenal - you can see the pastel marks so clearly, it looks like they were done right on the print paper - hard to believe it's a print!

--Please note: the watermark will NOT appear on the print you receive!--

The paper size is 8.5" x 11" but the actual image is smaller, with a border around it for framing. See photo with framed art for visualization purposes - you will NOT receive a framed piece of art, however! You will receive an unframed print only.

It's printed with archival inks on rich heavyweight archival paper. Paper may be smooth or have a slight texture to it, which enhances the fine art feel - if you have a strong preference, let me know. These paper/ink combinations are rated by Wilhelm Imaging Research to last 200 years in dark storage or 75 years under glass - so it's gonna last!

A note on color: I color-match my prints to the original/digital version. However, due to variations in computer monitors, the colors you see on your screen may look different from the printed version.

The print comes to you unmatted, in a cello sleeve with flawboard backing. To ensure it reaches you safely, I'll ship it in a rigid fiberboard mailer, with delivery confirmation.



Please note: the standard copyright applies to this print. My art is copyrighted (c) Stephanie Krause, all rights reserved; sale of print does not transfer copyright. The buyer is not entitled to reproduction rights.

Thanks for stopping by!


*giclee is a fancy term for an archival inkjet print! More detail from Wikipedia: Giclée, commonly pronounced "zhee-clay," is a generic term for the process of making fine art prints from a digital source using ink-jet printing. The term, from the French verb gicler meaning "to squirt, to spray", originally applied to fine art prints created on Iris printers in a process invented in the early 1990s but has since come to mean any high quality ink-jet print.

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I MUST HAVE THIS.