We have millions of different kinds of prints. But more importantly, we will help you find the right product.
Canvas, foundation of wood, more than 200 handmade frames. About 40% less than custom frame shop
We can match you to your favorite art, help you to create a family gallery, and even stick it to the wall.
Norman Rockwell (1894 - 1978) peas, 1954 Kellogg Cornflakes Canvas Oil on Canvas Advertisement © Norman Rockwell Family Agent. Copyright Norman Rockwell Museum Collection In the early 1950s, Chicago advertising director Leo Burnett used creative insights with star of the Michigan star grain maker Kellogg. Battle Creek paired with popular idol, Howdy Doody and Norman Rockwell. With innovative colors and modern design, the advertising campaign changed the appearance and inspiration of the serial box
Norman Rockwell (1894 - 1978) Daniel Boone, Pioneer Boy Scouts, 1914 Boy Life Story Illustration, Oil on canvas July 1914 © Norman Rockwell Family Agency. Copyright Norman Rockwell Museum Collection In 1914, Norman Rockwell produced 19 paintings and paintings to illustrate the story of Everett Tomlinson and Daniel Boone with eight books "The Life of Boys" Did. A central boy scout. Tomlinson's story occurred in 1773 when the Virginia Governor hired Boone to lead five families from the North Carolina State Yadkin through the Shawnee Indian Wilderness hunting ground to the Virginia clinch settlement.
Norman Rockwell was born in 1894 in a wealthy religious family in New York. As a child, Rockwell is not good at sports, but he draws pictures and entertains. In 1903, his family moved to a mamaloneck. Here, the artist is represented in his work Developing love to the country. By 1906, Rockwell decided to become an artist. Two years later, he accepted his first formal art training at Chase Art and Applied Art Institute. Then he began full-time research at a national university. In this school he received training in French academic tradition; this is a strict and formal training. In 1910, Rockwell studied at the federation of art students. And it was the most liberal and most exciting art school of the day, against the National Academy of Arts. In 1912, the family of Rockwell returned to New York. Around this time, Rockwell of teenager began to serve as a professional illustrator.