We offer free shipping on orders of $100 or more and a flat-rate shipping charge of $9.95 on orders less than $100.
Shipping artwork requires special packaging and attention. If you are ordering framed prints, canvas prints, or originals, we will add a surcharge to cover this extra packaging, delivery cost, and insurance, even if your order totals $100 or more.
As you can imagine, it is much more expensive to deliver a large, framed print than it is to deliver an unframed print on paper. We want your items to arrive in perfect condition, no matter their size. If your item requires a surcharge it will be noted on the product page as you make your selection, and in your shopping cart when you check out. Our surcharges are based on product weight and size, and reflect our actual costs to safely deliver your artwork.
If you’d like to pick up your order in Duluth or Grand Marais to save on shipping or surcharge fees, call 218-387-2491 and place your order by phone. We welcome all phone orders!
By Rick Allen
The shy little woodland creatures of the forest floor
observe with a savage!! intensity the ante meridian coffee break
As seen by that old naturalist RN Allen
sitting motionless in a cramped blind of clay & wattles made.
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Rick Allen prints are available in a variety of sizes and with optional framing in a classic style (white mat & black frame). The 30 W x 42 H inches and 42 W x 46 H inches prints will be framed to the edge of the print without a mat, using a 2-inch wide black wood frame instead of our standard 1-inch frame. Choose your print option (fine art paper or framed fine art paper), size, and quantity below.
$249.00 – $595.00
Rick has been an artist and printmaker for over 30 years. He grew up in Duluth, Minnesota, and studied history at St. Olaf College and the University of Chicago before veering from the scholarly path and attending the Rhode Island School of Design. He subsequently worked as a commercial and editorial illustrator, and in 2003 started The Kenspeckle Letterpress with his wife, artist Marian Lansky. At that time he began experimenting with wood engraving and linocut, and the rest is history. Rick always has “one or two feet in the 19th Century” and loves nothing more than producing printed ephemera. Learn about Rick's beloved Trapper's Daughter series on our blog.