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Get it between 2024-12-03 to 2024-12-10. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
Print enclosed in an intricately patterned Golden-relief frame to enhance the look of the artwork. Picture Size: 30x16", Total Size w/ Frame: 36x22", Each panel is ready to hang.
Claude Monet created over 250 oil paintings featuring his water lilies. Near the end of the series, when this piece was done, Monet became increasingly focused on capturing how water reflects light and the world above it.
Giclee Print Technology: Using archival-quality inks onto acid free cotton canvases, giclee printing guarantees incredible detail, phenomenal quality, and vibrant colors. Saturated colors for up to 100 years.
Semi-Gloss Acrylic Coating applied to enhance appearance, and to protect the print from dirt and dust, thereby extending the lifetime of the print and keeps it from fading.
Packed in Carton Box, Each Panel is Carefully Sealed by Corrugated or Air column Corner Wrap Protection. Plus Free Professional Picture Hanging Tools, Include Gloves, Nails, and Gradienter (level).
Claude Monet is considered the Founder of French Impressionism. His ambition to document the French countryside led him to paint the same scenes many times in order to capture the changing light throughout the day and the passing of seasons. From 1883, Monet lived in Giverny, where he began a vast landscaping project on his property, which would include the subject of his most well known works -- the lily ponds.Brand Quality: production from one of the world's leading wall decor manufacturersMade in USA: real handcrafted canvas prints produced and hand-stretched in CaliforniaWe believe that your office/home decor influences your lifestyle. Allow DecorArts to be your agent of inspiration and we will work hard to deliver beautiful art for your walls.About Giclee PrintsPronounced 'Zhee-Clay', the word comes from 'gicleur' which is the French technical term for an inkjet nozzle. Giclee printing is a type of inkjet printing - but not all inkjet prints can be considered a giclee. In order for a print to be considered a true giclee, it must meet at least two basic criteria:1. The paper or substrate used to actually print the final piece must be of archival quality. Typically it will say it is acid free and consists of a 100% cotton base.2.True Giclees are printed using pigment-based inks rather than the dye-based inks found in lower cost inkjets. Pigment-based inks have a longer life span that can last anywhere from 100 to 200 years without significant fading.The quality of the giclee print rivals traditional silver-halide and gelatin printing processes and is commonly found in museums, art galleries, and photographic galleries.