Mrs Rabbit Took Her Basket

Beatrix Potter

£160.00

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  • Limited Edition Print – Special 120th Anniverary Collector’s Print
  • Edition Size: 120
  • Image Size: 222 x 17 cm
  • Frame Size: 36 x 26″
  • Medium: Giclee – on paper and glazed
  • Price includes frame as shown in thumbnail image – whitewashed oak
  • Free standard UK mainland delivery
  • Full Certification & Documentation
  • See artist biography below
  • Go Back To: Beatrix Potter
  • DivideBuy is available, for more information click here

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Biography

Beatrix Potter – Mrs Rabbit Took Her Basket

Background

Beatrix Potter was born in London in 1866 and grew up living the conventionally sheltered life of a Victorian girl in a well-to-do household. Beatrix Potter was educated at home by a governess with her brother Bertram. Her constant companions were the pet animals she kept which she enjoyed studying and sketching. On summer holidays Beatrix Potter delighted in exploring the countryside and learning about plants and animals from her own observations

Career Beginnings

Beatrix Potter’s career as a children’s illustrator and storyteller began when The Tale of Peter Rabbit was published by Frederick Warne and Co. in 1902. The public loved it as soon as it appeared and Beatrix went on to produce on average two books a year until 1910. In the early years of publishing her editor was Norman Warne and they fell in love and became engaged in 1905. Unfortunately the marriage never took place as Norman died suddenly.

Legacy

The money she earned from her ‘little books’, as she called them, gave her financial independence and Beatrix Potter began to purchase property in her beloved Lake District. In 1913 Beatrix Potter married William Heelis, a Lakeland solicitor, and made Sawrey her permanent home. Writing and painting began to take second place to farming, sheep-breeding and buying stretches of the beautiful Lakeland countryside to ensure their conservation. When Beatrix Potter died in 1943 she left over 4,000 acres of land and fifteen farms to the nation.

For more Original Artwork by Beatrix Potter Shop Beatrix Potter

Beatrix Potter – Mrs Rabbit Took Her Basket

What is a Giclée Print? – pronounced ‘zhee-klay’

So, a giclée print is a high quality fine art reproduction. Archival pigment inks are sprayed on to an archival fine art paper or canvas.
Because of this, Jack Duganne coined the term ‘Giclée’, since it’s a French word meaning ‘a spray or a squirt of liquid’. The term ‘giclée print’ is used to describe the giclée printing process. Accordingly, images are created from the high-resolution digital capture of original artwork. Then they are printed using archival quality inks onto archival fine art substrates. Hence, canvas and fine art papers are used to achieve giclée prints with exceptional stability and lightfastness.

Chris Chapman – Borderline Collie – Hand Signed, Limited Edition Print
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