Wow that is really neat.In my Carolina Coastal travelogue, I commented on the Coffin Point Plantation, on St. Helena Island near Beaufort, SC - there I showed a beautiful photograph by David Shipper of the live oak lined lane to the house - he captured the gorgeous trees w/ their Spanish moss - well, I purchased the matted photo (18" x 24") w/ a metallic paper that shimmers and almost has a 3-D effect; made a frame w/ quarter-sawn white oak which has a lot of medullary rays (flecks) - the glass is museum grade and virtually transparent - results below (of course, looks much better 'in person' - sorry). Dave
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Wow that is really neat.
Both pictures are good with very good colour in the first and a good wide vista in the second. Sometimes you can get spectacular sunset photos when the sun gets low enough to light up the underside of the clouds.
Thank you.Both pictures are good with very good colour in the first and a good wide vista in the second. Sometimes you can get spectacular sunset photos when the sun gets low enough to light up the underside of the clouds.
.Reynolda House Museum of American Art will welcome an American masterwork for this exhibition, Samuel F.B. Morse’s Gallery of the Louvre (1831–33). Created when the artist was living and working in Paris, the painting represents the famed Salon Carré in the Musée du Louvre. Morse spent months walking the halls of the museum, selecting old master paintings for his composition, then painstakingly copying the paintings and “installed” them in the virtual gallery. The resulting monumental canvas—six feet by nine feet—was both an example of Morse’s erudition and skill and a tool of instruction for American viewers who did not have access to Renaissance and Baroque paintings.