Pisa Acrylic Print
by Steven Richman
Product Details
Pisa acrylic print by Steven Richman. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (3)
About Steven Richman
Steven Richman is an attorney practicing in New Jersey. He has lectured before photography clubs on various topics, including the legal rights of photographers. His photography has been exhibited in museums, is in private collections, and is also represented in the permanent collection of the New Jersey State Museum. He is the author of four photography books: The Bridges of New Jersey (Rutgers University Press), Mannequins (Schiffer Books), The Great Swamp (Schiffer Books) and Reconsidering Trenton (McFarland Publishers). He is also the author of The Photography Law Handbook, was just republished in its second edition in August 2021 by the American Bar Association. https://www.americanbar.org/products/inv/book/415257300/ See also...
$89.00
Nick Difi
Beautifully taken shot!
Sandy Tolman
Strong vertical lines and walls of the building fill the frame . . . gray stone of pavement like floor inside a large building, buildings edged by gray bases border onto the matching gray pavement . .. facade painted a single block of sunlit yellow gracefully interrupted by vertical windows and doorways delicately outlined in the same gray. Fastidious neatness of the clean-swept street and well maintained paint of the walls is almost matter-of-factly marred by scatterings of plain graffiti than sneak up on the viewer like signatures in year-book after being almost sublimated by the power of the colors and building lines. Perfectly placed wheels and frame of a bicycle rest riderless against the wall pointed towards the sunlight hitting the wall between unseen buildings.
Sandy Tolman
Absolutely fantastic!