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Taking A Break - Canvas Print

Regular price
$44.77
Regular price
Sale price
$44.77
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Description

Bring the artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your artwork gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars. Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.

About the Artwork

A great photo of a Colorado native, a large mule deer buck. The photo was taken near Bear Creek in Colorado Springs. Mule deer originally received their name because of their large ears, which resemble that of a mule. Large mule deer bucks are very crafty and are a rare sight these days. Only males (bucks) grow antlers, which shed and re-grow annually and increase in size as the animals mature. In the spring and summer, a mule deer’s antler is covered in velvet. Antler's growth will continue until around mid-to-late August. As the antlers harden and the velvet dries up, bucks will begin to rub their antlers. Rubbing of antlers is often done on small trees or bushes. Mule deer bucks begin to strip off their velvet in mid-September with all the velvet usually off by the first of October. Mule deer bucks in full velvet are an awesome sight and the velvet greatly enhances the size of the bucks. Because of western Colorado’s topographic diversity, many mule deer populations migrate from high-elevation summer ranges to low-elevation winter ranges.

    Taking A Break - Canvas Print
    Taking A Break - Canvas Print
    Taking A Break - Canvas Print
    Taking A Break - Canvas Print

    FAQs

    Shipping

    Please allow 5-7 business days to manufacture your order before shipping

    Returns

    Our return policy is very simple: If you're not happy with a purchase that you made on Michael Malta Studio, you can return it to us within 30 days of the order date. Click here for full return policy.

    Giclée Prints

    Giclée (pronounced zhee-clay) is a term created by print-maker Jack Duganne in 1991 to refer to digitally-reproduced fine art prints. Giclée is based on the French verb “gicler” which means to squirt or spray a liquid. Reproductions created via a state-of-the-art digital printing process. The high-resolution image is highly stable and can be reproduced on canvas, paper, metal, or other materials.

    Fine art giclée prints have become the print method of choice for professional photographers, artists, publishers of fine art, and museums who demand high quality fine art reproductions. Prominent art museums such as the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the Guggenheim, Smithsonian Institute, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art have hosted exhibitions featuring fine art giclée prints.