Rotary Phone Acrylic Print
by Steve Ladner
Product Details
Rotary Phone acrylic print by Steve Ladner. 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.
Design Details
This is a photograph of a rotary telephone enhanced to create a green and orange glow, an extremely graphic and iconic image. I found the phone as it... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (1)
Artist's Description
This is a photograph of a rotary telephone enhanced to create a green and orange glow, an extremely graphic and iconic image. I found the phone as it is in a hotel lobby in NYC. It was on a table and I stripped out the wallpaper behind it and replaced it with the orange color. This is essentially a digital painting transformed from a photograph, and can be printed on a variety of objects, all available here on Fine Art America. Prints can be made on canvas, fine art paper, metal and acrylic.
About Steve Ladner
In the early 1970s I created a fashion photography studio in New York City. I was shooting for GQ, Harpers Bazaar, Esquire, Town&Country, other magazines, and cosmetic campaigns for Revlon, Chanel, and others. In the 1980s I lived in France and shot for French Vogue and other fashion magazines and advertising accounts. I always approached the work as an art and did my best to make commercial work as artistic as I could make it given the restrictions. Some of my fashion work now has a vintage fashion art appeal. I believe the images I chose transcend their original purpose and are interesting in their color, composition, emotion, and form. I was not formally trained in photography, so I tried things; I was free to experiment and...
$109.00
Anita Dent
Fantastic image! L/F
Steve Ladner replied:
Thank you, Anita. Always encouraging to hear from someone, because sometimes I feel lost in the wilderness of thousands of artists on the site.