Description
Signed print on archival paper. 11″ x 17″
Who doesn’t love little birds with jaunty hats? Hang this sweet little birdie on your wall to cheer any room.
$20.00
Signed print on archival paper. 11″ x 17″
Who doesn’t love little birds with jaunty hats? Hang this sweet little birdie on your wall to cheer any room.
Out of stock
Signed print on archival paper. 11″ x 17″
Who doesn’t love little birds with jaunty hats? Hang this sweet little birdie on your wall to cheer any room.
If I can stop one heart from breaking, I shall not live in vain.
We were inspired by our famous neighbor! We had some fun reimagining Emily Dickinson in a dozen different ways in her famous Daguerreotype photograph.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on archival paper. 11″ x 14″
* the Emily Dickinson Museum is across the street from Hope & Feathers
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on beautiful 100% cotton-rag paper.
From 1936 – 1943 the Federal Art Project under the Works Progress Administration commissioned over 200,000 works from American artists and artisans in order to support struggling creatives. Posters were designed to publicize exhibits, community activities, theatrical productions, and health and educational programs in seventeen states and the District of Columbia. The Federal Art Project was of one of the first U.S. Government programs to support the arts.
We are happy to now sell newly restored, archival reproductions of vintage WPA Posters, select WWI Posters, and many botanical illustrations. When properly framed these prints can last over 200 years!
LOVE is anterior to life, Posterior to death, Initial of creation, and The exponent of breath.
We were inspired by our famous neighbor! We had some fun reimagining Emily Dickinson in a dozen different ways in her famous Daguerreotype photograph.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on archival paper. 11″ x 14″
* the Emily Dickinson Museum is across the street from Hope & Feathers
Fame is a bee. It has a song— It has a sting— Ah, too, it has a wing.
We were inspired by our famous neighbor! We had some fun reimagining Emily Dickinson in a dozen different ways in her famous Daguerreotype photograph.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on archival paper. 11″ x 14″
* the Emily Dickinson Museum is across the street from Hope & Feathers
These imaginative space travel poster designs were recently made available to the public by NASA/JPL.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on beautiful 100% cotton-rag paper. 16” x 24”
Earth: There's no place like home. Warm, wet and with an atmosphere that's just right, Earth is the only place we know of with life – and lots of it. JPL's Earth science missions monitor our home planet and how it's changing so it can continue to provide a safe haven as we reach deeper into the cosmos.
Contact us if you'd like the poster in another size, or if you'd like it matted and framed.
That till I loved I never lived —Enough—
We were inspired by our famous neighbor! We had some fun reimagining Emily Dickinson in a dozen different ways in her famous Daguerreotype photograph.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on archival paper. 11″ x 14″
* the Emily Dickinson Museum is across the street from Hope & Feathers
Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul…
We were inspired by our famous neighbor! We had some fun reimagining Emily Dickinson in a dozen different ways in her famous Daguerreotype photograph.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on archival paper. 11″ x 14″
* the Emily Dickinson Museum is across the street from Hope & Feathers
These imaginative space travel poster designs were recently made available to the public by NASA/JPL.
Printed in-house on our fine art pigment printer on beautiful 100% cotton-rag paper. 16” x 24”
Kepler 186f – Where the Grass is Always Redder: Kepler-186f is the first Earth-size planet discovered in the potentially 'habitable zone' around another star, where liquid water could exist on the planet's surface. Its star is much cooler and redder than our Sun. If plant life does exist on a planet like Kepler-186f, its photosynthesis could have been influenced by the star's red-wavelength photons, making for a color palette that's very different than the greens on Earth. This discovery was made by Kepler, NASA's planet hunting telescope.
Contact us if you'd like the poster in another size, or if you'd like it matted and framed.