Examples
We scan, photo shoot and reproduce a wide array of artwork - everthing from anime, to oil paintings, watercolor, acrylics, charcoal and pastels. Artists and collectors bring us works from famous artists to capture and preserve their collection, as well as personal works to be reproduced for friends and family members. And of course we also work with lots of professional artists who sell their limited edition prints in galleries, online, at art fairs, and other retail outlets.
Following is a small sample of some of the artists and photographers we work with:
Naomi Miyamoto Gray:Artist
Skygoddess.net
Artist Bio:Naomi Gray - Ellensburg, WA. Born and raised in Tokyo, Japan, her fascination with Western movies and astronomy brought her to the University of Arizona, where she lived for several years. In Arizona Naomi learned to fly hang gliders, which became her passion for the past 15 years. In 2003, marriage to a fellow hang glider pilot brought her to Ellensburg, where she pursues her love of art, aviation, and the outdoors. In 2007, Naomi received a bachelor degree in fine arts, with an emphasis in painting, from Central Washington University.
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Cythia Fairley: Watercolor Artist
Cynthia's watercolors have incredible depth in color and she is highly discerning of light balance and the effect of color in light reflection. Cynthia's work reproduces well at varioius sizes on our Fine Art Rag papers. Given the range of colors she uses in her works, we've used various substrates to highlight her work, including Moab Natural 300gsm, Moab Bright White 300gsm, and Breathing Color Velium and Textured papers.
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Mt. Rainier by John Eldridge
This is a photo stitch of Mt. Rainier, done using a Canon 30D in infrared mode. The print was done
on canvas and coated with a Matte UV coating. This is a fine example of how giclée printing on
canvas can really show off a fine photograph. This was stretched 48" x 12" and makes a spectacular
wall hanging.
Tarsha Hall: Graphic Designer
Ornate, vivid, intricate, inimitable. These are the words that are often used to describe Tarsha Hall's unmistakable body of work. But when prompted to explain the 'vision' behind her work, Hall avoids the standard clichéd, self-important art community discourse. Her answer is simple: "It either moves you or it moves right through you."
We think you'll experience the latter.
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Scott Moore: Pen & Ink
One of the most difficult things to recapture, surprisingly isn't color, but the lack of color. Pen & ink drawings, line drawings, and architectural drawings that have a lot of white space, or blank paper, represent an interesting problem in fine art reproduction. The problem is that when you capture artwork digitally or otherwise, the paper is seen by the camera as being less than white. What you end up with is a slight grey.
The desired result is to have a print where all of the line work is perfectly captured with all its sharpness, and all value is removed where the paper was. This allows the new paper to show through, and the result is a print that looks almost identical to the original.
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