Water Houses - GLOW-IN-THE-DARK 8.5" x 11" giclee print (hand-painted glow accents) - unframed

$32.00

It's quiet by the lake.

This is a giclée* print of one of my original collages, with hand-painted glow-in-the-dark accents (in this case, the windows and moon). The paper size is 8.5" x 11" but the actual image is smaller, with a border around it for framing. Since I can't take a good photo in a dark room to show you what the glowing effect looks like, I've photoshopped the second image to give you an idea (though on the actual print the glowing areas will be slightly less even since it's hand-painted). The glow is great - it lasts a while in the dark! Fun stuff!!!

(Obviously, the watermark will *not* appear on the print you receive!)

Image will have a white border around it.

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 art. 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 and unframed, 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.