Item# CHPAA1132
Out of Stock - $24.95
Charley Harper Once There Was a Field 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle captures Harper’s signature whimsical style which has delighted art and animal lovers for more than sixty years. Harper’s distinctive use of simple geometric shapes, patterns, and vivid colors became part of his hallmark style. Harper designed more than fifty posters for various natural areas, parks, and conservation organizations. Charley Harper’s Once There Was a Field invites us into a wondrous world of birds, blooms, bugs, and butterflies. The sounds are long past hearing, the scents past savoring, the sights past seeing, but all will live forever in Harper’s artwork. An ideal gift for any generation. 1000 pieces. Dimensions: 20” x 29”.
$24.95 $26.95
The Good Morning Inc. City 3D 2025 monthly desk calendar features vistas from New York, Paris, and London. Interlock the shapes in a new way each month to showcase the calendar grid and create a 3D cityscape for your desk. This 3D calendar was designed and made in Japan by Good Morning Inc., a brand committed to developing products that...
$24.95 $26.95
The Good Morning Inc. Flowers 3D 2025 monthly desk calendar was designed and made in Japan by Good Morning Inc., a brand committed to developing products that express the special qualities and possibilities of premium paper and card stock. Display a single flower of the month, or a veritable bouquet as the mood takes you. Hailing from Shibuya, Tokyo, Good...
$39.95
The Frank Lloyd Wright Saguaro Forms Comfort Mat reduces stress on your joints and back with an anti-fatigue mat patterned with one of his one of Wright's most popular designs. Saguaro Forms is one of a number of Liberty Magazine cover designs from 1926-27 that the editors thought to be too "radical" and never used. In 1973 there was a...
$47.95 $52.95
The William Morris Strawberry Thief Arts & Crafts Doormat is part of the Victoria and Albert Museum Collection, and is inspired by one of the most iconic works of the 19th century by the great pioneer of the British Arts and Crafts Movement, William Morris (1834-96), who based this design on the thrushes he saw stealing strawberries from the grounds of Kelmscott...