british seaweeds 137 Size:21x30In 1859, the English printer Henry Bradbury published The Nature printed British Sea weeds . In this poster we see the illustration British Seaweeds 137 Fucus ceranoides. Bradbury was quick to begin using the method of "nature printing" a process of using plant or animal material to create a print. The process had previously been developed by the Austrian printer Alois Auer. Bradbury placed the subject between two smooth and polished plates, one of
Poster with the painting The Glacier from the 1840s by the Norwegian landscape painter Peder Balke
The first store was first opened in 1914
Canvas with the painting Ice Floes created in 1893 by Claude Monet - a historically famous French artist who is considered one of the pioneers of Impressionism
one of the most difficult slopes in Sweden
portrayed with warmth and skill by Jahr
something that changed the urban landscape drastically
we see the sorceress sneaking out to a cabin in a dark forest landscape to smell the good smell of food
strongmen were celebrated as sports heroes and national ambassadors
Production peaked in the late 1800s before being brought to an abrupt halt by 1920s prohibition
and Paris served as the world's stage
which was placed on display in New York during October 1851
and the small building on the mountain to the right of the yacht's mast is the old pilot lookout