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FEATHER YOUR NEST WITH Art from Calmer Times
JOHN JAMES AUDUBON'S DOUBLE ELEPHANT (LIFE SIZE) BIRDS OF AMERICA PRINTS
Limited editions, archival fine art paper, direct-camera (High definition), pencil-numbered, stamped with Princeton seal, absolutely stunning!
Welcome to Princeton Audubon Limited - As seen in the New York Times

Would you rather frame a violin or a Stradivarius?

You can get Audubon pictures anywhere, especially with Photoshop and today's instant ink-jet (giclee) printing.  But Princetons are Audubon re-creations, fine art prints.  Audubon author and collector William Steiner states, "They are true prints - great paper, incredible detail and true colors. Simply the finest Audubon facsimiles ever made!"  Princeton purchased the actual originals and physically used them in order to make a one-to-one transfer of all their intricate detail and vibrant color onto the finest paper.  Princetons are in fact part of the permanent collection of many museums and universities.  Why not frame a Stradivarius, and make your walls sing with life and history?

Audubon print: Snowy Heron.  Just a small detail shown here. Click this image for more information.

Small detail from the Snowy Egret.  The figure seen approaching from the lower right is said to be Audubon himself. In the early spring of 1832, Audubon and his assistant George Lehman stayed at the home of John Bachman in Charleston, South Carolina.  Audubon wrote of the thousands of snowy egrets that had arrived there by March 25 and "were seen in the marshes and rice fields, all in full plumage."  Soon he painted this magnificent egret, while Lehman added the landscape of a rice plantation in the Carolina low country.

Chris Lane of the ANTIQUES ROADSHOW: "...of all the full-size facsimiles of Audubon's prints, those from Princeton Audubon Limited come the closest in appearance and quality to the originals.  Combining this with their very reasonable cost make the Princeton Audubon facsimiles winners for those looking to acquire some of the most dramatic American natural history images ever produced."

The Real Deal in Audubon Art.  As seen in The New York Times.