Description
Lilo & Stitch Smile Series Stitch Canvas Giclee Print:
- Smile, Stitch!
- Adorable Disney artwork based on Lilo & Stitch.
- Hand-numbered limited edition giclee, signed by artist Tsuneo Sanda.
- Features a delightful image of Stitch holding a doll.
- Limited to just 150 pieces worldwide.
Signed by artist Tsuneo Sanda and measuring 14-inches tall x 11-inches wide, this adorable Lilo & Stitch Smile Series Stitch Canvas Giclee Print from Acme Archives is printed on canvas. It features a delightful image of Stitch holding a doll and doing what? Smiling, of course, with a reflection of the night sky in his eyes. A hand-numbered limited edition of just 150 pieces worldwide, this wonderful unframed piece includes a certificate of authenticity. Now it's your turn to smile!
Acme Archives Limited presents a wonderful opportunity for true fans of Walt Disney's magical world with this Smile Series of Disney artwork. Complete with certificate of authenticity, each Disney Smile Series giclee print is a hand-numbered limited edition of 150 pieces that measures 14-inches tall x 11-inches wide and features adorable, endearing artwork of popular Disney characters, signed by artist Tsuneo Sanda.
Artist Tsuneo Sanda was born in Osaka, Japan. He first discovered his love for art around the age of 7, and his early idols include Rembrandt, Rene Magritte, Paul Davis, and Robert Peak. Sanda’s original paintings are a unique blend of technique and media that on average require about 10 days to complete, from concept to final art. "I always try to take things in a natural state," he says, though his favorite subjects include those "where I can let my imagination run higher..."
Giclee (pronounced "zhee-clay") is an invented name for the process of making fine-art prints from a digital source using ink-jet printing. The word was coined to distinguish commonly known industrial "Iris proofs" from the fine-art prints artists were producing on the same printers. The name has since come to mean any high-quality, ink-jet print, and is often used in galleries and print shops to denote such. In the past few years, the word (as a fine-art term) has come to be associated with prints using fade-resistant "archival" inks and the inkjet printers that use them. A wide variety of substrates are available, including various textures and finishes such as matte photo paper, watercolor paper, cotton canvas, or artist textured vinyl.