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- POPPY FIELD by MONET Hard Shell Eyeglass Cases with matching cleaning micro fiber cloth - Claude Monet Art Lovers Gifts / Famous Arts Accessories - MADE IN FRANCE
POPPY FIELD by MONET Hard Shell Eyeglass Cases with matching cleaning micro fiber cloth - Claude Monet Art Lovers Gifts / Famous Arts Accessories - MADE IN FRANCE
The POPPY FIELD Art Design Eyeglass Case is uniquely designed with MONET'S famous artwork.
Now you can carry your eyeglasses in style with your favorite Famous Art anywhere you go!
These authentic and unique Art Designs Eyeglass Cases are made in Europe with high quality standards.
Our Hard Shell eyeglass cases are covered with a soft velvet fabric and lined with soft plush fabric inside to protect your glasses from scratching. It comes with a matching Art Designed Micro Fiber Cloth safe for cleaning all types of delicate surfaces (eyeglasses, sunglasses, camera lenses, computers, etc.) The ultra-soft and extremely fine microfiber fabric absorbs and gently lifts away fingerprints, oil smudges, dust, and dirt.
Size: Length: 6.5" (16.3 cm) X Width: 2.6" (6.3 cm) X Height: 1.7" (4.2 cm)
Fits most reading glasses and small sunglasses.
They are absolutely gorgeous, unique and a perfect gift for any occasion.
Eyeglass Cases are shipped directly from our workshop in California (2-3 days Shipping anywhere in the USA)
He showed Poppy Field to the public at the first Impressionist exhibition held in the photographer Nadar's disused studio in 1874. Now one of the world's most famous paintings, it conjures up the vibrant atmosphere of a stroll through the fields on a summer's day.
Monet diluted the contours and constructed a colorful rhythm with blobs of paint starting from a sprinkling of poppies; the disproportionately large patches in the foreground indicate the primacy he put on visual impression. A step towards abstraction had been taken.
In the landscape, a mother and child pair in the foreground and another in the background are merely a pretext for drawing the diagonal line that structures the painting. Two separate color zones are established, one dominated by red, the other by a bluish green. The young woman with the sunshade and the child in the foreground are probably the artist's wife, Camille, and their son Jean.