Old and New Acrylic Print
by Paul Plaine
Product Details
Old and New acrylic print by Paul Plaine. 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
Rising 870 feet in lower Manhattan between Beekman St and Spruce St is master architect Frank Gerhy�s first New York City residential... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (9)
Artist's Description
Rising 870 feet in lower Manhattan between Beekman St and Spruce St is master architect Frank Gerhy�s first New York City residential building, New York by Gerhy.
About Paul Plaine
John Naggy's learn to draw kits and his weekly TV show put Paul on a path. That path led to an art company and a 37-year career in advertising, doing artwork on ads for major ad campaigns, publishing, and the music industry. Along, that journey photography also became a significant part of his career. In 2006 I retired early and opened a fine art printing studio to work on my photos and bring my photography, digital, printmaking skills to local artists. Now on to chapter three.
$79.00
Ramon Martinez
Great concept and sutnnig capture. Voted and FAV
Paul Plaine replied:
Thanks so much.
Therese Alcorn
The contrasts are great!!
Paul Plaine replied:
Thank you.
Carla Parris
Wonderful architectural image. You have really captured the soaring height with your perspective!
Paul Plaine replied:
Thanks - I appreciate the comments
DiDi Higginbotham
Beautiful shot! voted
Paul Plaine replied:
Thank you.
Danuta Bennett
Great capture! Voted
Paul Plaine replied:
Thank you so much.
Paul Plaine
Rising 870 feet in lower Manhattan, is architect Frank Gerhy's new and visually exciting building New York by Gerhy. While photographing it from different vantage points this one stands out for its contrast, the Old and New.