FYI! This is a smaller illustration, and is prized accordingly. Beautiful! From an antique childrens book. The illustration would be amazing framed, but can also be used in your scrap-booking, paper crafts, jewelry making, whatever strikes your fancy! Ready for you to print out! Total print size- 3.85" x 5" You are purchasing an incredibly sharp, clear, digital image scanned at a high resolution, 300dpi in jpg form. Once payment is received, you will be able to INSTANTLY DOWNLOAD THE IMAGE. Our images can fit on 8.5 x 11 paper. **THE ANNOYING WATERMARK WILL NOT APPEAR ON YOUR DOWNLOAD** What fabulous things can you create? Announcements, Invitations, and place cards, (think wedding, engagements, baby!) Paper Arts: Jewelry: Used on transfers: Print and Frame For: Greeting cards Earrings Tee-shirts Baby's Nursery Stationery Bracelets Tote bags Child's Room Bookmarks Necklaces Pillows Wall Decor Gift tags Napkins Scrap-booking Dish towels Altered Art Ribbons Card Making And any magical thing your artistic bent can create! The Fine Print (No pun intended) Do's Do make fantastico art with our digital delights! Don'ts Do not use our images in digital collage sheets, resell them, reproduce them in a compilation cd for resale, or share them with buddies. We and our little elves work tirelessly to ferret out special pieces of paper ephemera, which we then scan and restore to perfection for the discerning creative customer. Taking our work and reselling or redistributing is not only bad form, it angers our little pals. And you don't want to make an elf mad! So please refrain from practices that you would not want done to your artwork. Thank you!
Website: www.katebaylay.com
Japanese artist Shintaro Ohata has a unique characteristic style – he places sculptures in front of paintings and shows them as one work, a ...
ELIZABETH SHIPPEN GREEN PAPER DOLL BOOKS #2 1906, watercolor and charcoal 23" x 14 1/2", signed lower left Harper's Monthly, December 1906 'The Mind of a Child' by Edward S. Martin SETTING THE TABLE c. 1900, pen and ink on illustration board 14" x 20", signed lower right THE FIVE LITTLE PIGS watercolor and charcoal […]
Akiya Kageichi is a Japanese illustrator who calls himself Golden Gravel, a name which may refer to Japanese rock gardens. His sinister jesters, lazy rulers and clandestine warriors are set within scenes full of chaotic imagery. Astrological symbols, particularly moons, are heavily prominent, suggesting the mysterious forces of dark nights are at work. In a single plane, objects morph, creating dynamic and active scenes. Kageichi reveals hidden underworlds and secret futures, in which sorcery and witchcraft pull the strings and determine what happens in the real world.
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An exclusive interview with Garis Edelweiss, winner of the Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize: iCanvas Digital Art Award 2023 for his artwork "The Healer".
Did you know that most of the different languages we speak today can actually be placed in only a couple of groups by their origin? This is what illustrator Minna Sundberg has captured in an elegant infographic of a linguistic tree which reveals some fascinating links between different tongues.
This mysterious Japanese artist, who goes by the pseudonym of Ariduka55 or Monokubo on social media channels, creates otherworldly beautiful drawings that breathe life into a completely new fantasy world where giant animals live and evolve alongside humans.
The amazing art of Tsuyoshi Nagano
This amazing thumbprint art is the work of Cheryl Sorg of Encinitas, California. At first I thought it was a selvage quilt! I wondered...
Detail of Tom Bagshaw's amazing work for the 'Ephemeral' group exhibition at Modern Eden Gallery this September . Beautiful Bizarre Magazine curated exhibition: "Ephemeral". Exhibition Dates:...
659 毛糸 woolen yarn #illustration #hedgehog #イラスト #ハリネズミ
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Seattle-based illustrator Kai Carpenter creates awesome artworks with a deep reference to American art-deco and post Fordism era.
Del Kathryn Barton has laboured meticulously over her mark making in 'Come of things', with every stroke, dot and run of paint counting in the final composition. The attention to detail almost overwhelms the subject matter, as paint and image ...
Surrealistic 70's serigraphies by Yugoslavian born Russian artist Nikolai Lutohin. Many of these illustrations appeared on the Sci-fi magazine Galaksija. Related: Yugodrom, a tumblr focused on "graphic aesthetics from ex Yugoslavia" Via: 50 Watts