To flatten rolled prints, they can be laid out under a stack of heavy books. Rolled prints are packaged around the outside of a tube and then bubble-wrapped and placed inside a long box - this is because the thick fine art paper cannot be rolled tightly enough to go inside the tubes without causing damage to the paper. Prints may be shipped either flat or rolled, depending on size. Shipping is USPS First-Class with tracking, and orders over $35 in the United States ship free. Processing time before shipment is 1-3 business days. Although custom requests are welcome, please note that the print sizes are listed to the largest possible size for each image. The image scans used are high resolution and printed at full quality. These are fine art prints, not cheap posters - produced with the highest quality inks, thick matte paper, and Giclee (museum quality) printing method. Printed with a professional Giclee printer on Somerset Velvet 100% cotton rag fine art paper with archival pigment inks. See the last paragraph of this description for more available border options.*** Smaller prints (3.5x5, 4x4, 4x5, 4圆) will be sent without borders unless requested otherwise. ***1/4 inch white borders are used for prints 5 inches and larger unless requested otherwise - this means the image will be set 1/4 inch within the exact paper size listed above. Early tourists preferred small inexpensive vessels as souvenirs and cared less about quality.Giclee fine art print reproduction from antique illustration by Pueblo Indian artist Awa Tsireh of an elk, 1925-1930.Ĥx5 or 8x10 or 11x14 or 16x20 paper size. federal government, which included sending Pueblo youths to boarding schools as well as attacks against ceremonial practices that culminated in a series of documents issued in the early 1920s (by Commissioner of the Office of Indian Affairs Charles Burke) restricting many of them.Īt this time, Pueblo potters-mostly women-began to produce less elaborate small pottery vessels and figurines so that they could maximize their sales to tourists. These sales also created room for Pueblo cultural expression in the face of the forced assimilation policy by the U.S. The sales of Indigenous hand-made objects for the non-Native market helped Pueblos to survive economically. in 1848 as a result of the Mexican-American War. Meanwhile, Pueblo communities needed to earn cash due to the reduction of the land available for agriculture and hunting due to the encroachment of Anglo and Hispanic ranchers seeking to increase their production of beef as well as the increased presence of a cash economy after New Mexico was annexed by the U.S. Along with the railroad run by Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe (AT
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