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Oil, mostly. He painted on wood and canvas.
The original painting, by Jeffrey Smart, is oil paint on canvas.
You will have to decide whether you want to crop the original image or to draw/paint the original as is and fill in the extra space on either side with an extension of the background. If you want to crop, make your grid on the original in 2" increments and the canvas grid in 3" increments. If you want to extend the background on the canvas, go for a 2" grid on the original and a 2 1/2" grid on the canvas.
Some million dollars.
Norman Rockwell is a very famous painter of humorous American life. The media he worked with was oil paints; it was amazing the detail he could paint with this inarticulate media. His works show vignettes of American life during the early to mid-twentieth century. He illustrated The Saturday Evening Post for 47 consecutive years, painting a classic American scene every week. His self-portrait is nearly a caricature, showing him looking into a mirror over his canvas, with a pipe in his mouth, and I think a dog lying at his feet. Another famous painting shows a group of boys racing to the lake in the woods, stripping their clothes and shoes as they run, dog racing alongside excitedly, the sign in the background, "No swimming." Every painting is filled with details that increase the humor of the scene.
Oil, mostly. He painted on wood and canvas.
The Runaway 1958 The Saturday Evening Post, September 20, 1958 (cover) Oil on canvas 35 3/4 x 33 1/2 in. The Norman Rockwell Museum of Stockbridge (Massachusetts)
If you ask about paintings ALWAYS name the artist!!! If it's the one by Norman Rockwell it is oil paint on canvas.
The original painting, by Jeffrey Smart, is oil paint on canvas.
You will have to decide whether you want to crop the original image or to draw/paint the original as is and fill in the extra space on either side with an extension of the background. If you want to crop, make your grid on the original in 2" increments and the canvas grid in 3" increments. If you want to extend the background on the canvas, go for a 2" grid on the original and a 2 1/2" grid on the canvas.
Ebay has several listings for Canvas Brisker and Canvas Cologne. Beware, some of the old stuff does not retain the original fragrance and smells "stale." Another cologne, Cacharel for men or por homme smells almost exactly the same as Canvas Brisker but is still available.
Some million dollars.
no but i have an original oil canvas by r. heyer
Yes, the painting is titled Lincoln the Railsplitter, the 84.5 x 44.5 inch oil on canvas was painted by Norman Rockwell in 1965 as a $4,000 commission for the lobby of the Spokane Washington Lincoln First Federal Savings and Loan by the bank's CEO, Donald P. "Don" Lindsay.Later the work became part of the art collection of well-known Texas entrepreneur Ross Perot, where it was not open to public viewing.In November 2006 Lincoln the Railsplitter was purchased by the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio for $1.6 millon dollars at an auction held at Christie's in New York City, New York.The painting was purchased with moneys from the Butler's acquisition fund, Draime Fund and through community gifts.It is the first work by Norman Rockwell to be included in the Butler's permanent collection, thus filling an important gap in the Institute's twentieth century historic survey. Where it is on open display for public viewing during the Institute operating hours.
Sneakers were invented in the United States in 1892. The original sneaker had a rubber sole and a canvas top.
Norman Rockwell is a very famous painter of humorous American life. The media he worked with was oil paints; it was amazing the detail he could paint with this inarticulate media. His works show vignettes of American life during the early to mid-twentieth century. He illustrated The Saturday Evening Post for 47 consecutive years, painting a classic American scene every week. His self-portrait is nearly a caricature, showing him looking into a mirror over his canvas, with a pipe in his mouth, and I think a dog lying at his feet. Another famous painting shows a group of boys racing to the lake in the woods, stripping their clothes and shoes as they run, dog racing alongside excitedly, the sign in the background, "No swimming." Every painting is filled with details that increase the humor of the scene.
The original In the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard, is not for sale. A reproduction costs a few dollars.