Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
6.50" x 10.00"
Overall:
6.50" x 10.00"
Bush Sunflower Opening Wood Print
by Steven Schwartzman
Product Details
Bush Sunflower Opening wood print by Steven Schwartzman. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and added depth of a wood print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 3/4" thick maple wood. There are D-clips on the back of the print for mounting it to your wall using mounting hooks and nails (included).
Design Details
This is an opening flower head of a relatively little-known wildflower called the bush sunflower, Simsia calva.
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Wood Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (3)
Artist's Description
This is an opening flower head of a relatively little-known wildflower called the bush sunflower, Simsia calva.
About Steven Schwartzman
I've been involved with photography since the late 1960s, when I got my first real camera toward the end of my two years in Honduras as a Peace Corps math teacher. From the 1970s through the mid-1980s I went through a phase of black and white infrared photography, often even in 3-D. My current period began in 1999. Call me a nature photographer and you won't be wrong, but because there's not a lot of majestic scenery where I live (which is Austin, Texas), I've gotten interested in portraying the native plants of the region, especially our many wildflowers. Along with them come occasional butterflies, birds, and other small creatures. I often think of all these subjects, even the plants, as if they were posing for portraits, so you could...
$76.00
Marcia Lee Jones
It looks like a lovely piece of jewelry! t
Steven Schwartzman replied:
Other viewers have occasionally suggested that some of the other flowers I've photographed would make good models for jewelry. It's not a skill I have, but maybe I should see about commissioning someone who does know how to make jewelry.
Karen Adams
Beautiful minimalism!...my potd!...v
Steven Schwartzman replied:
I appreciate your appreciation, Karen.
Christina Rollo
Beautiful detail and dof, great work!!
Steven Schwartzman replied:
Thanks, Christina. The site was in shadows and the resulting shallow depth of field worked well in portraying this little-known sunflower species.