Printer's Block Acrylic Print
by Richard Reeve
Product Details
Printer's Block acrylic print by Richard Reeve. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.
Design Details
Modern artists often use small scale wooden block printing techniques to either directly apply a patter to fabric or use wax in batik printing.... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (1)
Artist's Description
Modern artists often use small scale wooden block printing techniques to either directly apply a patter to fabric or use wax in batik printing. However, the factory workers who used these old wooden printing blocks to carefully apply standard patterns to yard after yard of material, day in and day out probably had quite a different perspective than there descendants...
About Richard Reeve
I am a visual story teller based in southern Pennsylvania, USA and my imagery is inspired from everyday objects and situations I encounter through my travels. My work has been exhibited and sold at the Bradford Avenue Galleries (Allinson Gallery and Huston Gallery) at Chester County Art Association, in addition to this online store. My images have also been exhibited at Panorama XXL, Rouen, France and the Cincinnati Museum Center, Cincinnati, USA. I hope you will find something that inspires you, amuses you, makes you think, smile, frown, or perhaps just scratch your head. Go on, dive in... and for those of you who do so, I offer a big thank you for looking through my window on the world! ~Richard ReevePhotos Inspiring...
$84.00
Meg Shearer
Wonderful image Richard! I love the focus and abstract feel. I imagine these are more fun for us than they were for the workers... L/F!!!
Richard Reeve replied:
Thank you, Meg. I agree, often we look at old objects with "rose-tinted spectacles"..