Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
10.00" x 7.50"
Overall:
10.00" x 7.50"
Glass Float Canvas Print
by Nick Payne
Product Details
Glass Float canvas print by Nick Payne. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your image gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars (gallery wrap) or 5/8" x 5/8" stretcher bars (museum wrap). Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
A delight of beach combing is finding a glass float. They are less common today, but glass floats, in many different shapes, are still being used in... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Comments (4)
Artist's Description
A delight of beach combing is finding a glass float. They are less common today, but glass floats, in many different shapes, are still being used in some Asian countries.
For additional information and topics of interest, please see "new blog" at my website www.birdseyeartstudio.com
About Nick Payne
Nick Payne credits William Arthur Phillips, a gifted artist and teacher in Tacoma, WA, as an important early influence who developed Nick's art, and who inspired a career in art and education. Paintings posted on this site span four decades. Following graduation from the University of Washington, Nick spent two years in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Then he returned to the USA, and taught at a rural public school in northeastern Washington State. During this time he married. Several paintings from this time feature his children. After 20 years in the classroom, he returned to western WA and served as a principal for 13 years in the Bellingham and Ferndale school districts. Through most of his career in education, Nick�s parallel career...
$75.00
Peri Craig
I had a very substantial collection of these as a very young girl. I would take the allowance that I got from my mother and set aside, then take the allowance from my father. He'd always ask if I wanted to risk losing it in a game of cards, and I quite often won. Id take my winnings and my allowance and go to a very small and crowded shanty-shop just off the beach and use it to buy floats in clear, blues and greens. They were set on my windowsill and hung in white netting over the window to make a grand play of light and color.. Thank you, Nick, for bringing that back to me. It is a wonderful memory! V & F, of course!
James Cox
I am not a fan of pastel, but your work is incredible :)
Nick Payne replied:
Here are my reasons why I love pastel -www.birdseyeartstudio.com/new-blog/