McDaids Pub, Dublin - 385

Size & Framing Options Guide
Size & Framing Options Guide

FRAMED OPTION

print frame dimensions
  Outer Frame Size
Image Size
Small
Frame

36 x 33cm

14.2" x 13"

19 x 15cm

7.5" x 6"

Medium
Frame

50 x 43cm

19.7"x 17"

31 x 24cm

12.2" x 9.4"

Large
Frame

76 x 64cm

30" x 25.2"

52 x 40cm

20.4" x 15.7"

 

UNFRAMED OPTION

 print mount dimensions

  Outer Mount Size
Image Size
Small
Mount

33 x 30cm

13" x 11.8"

19 x 15cm

7.5" x 6"

Medium
Mount

47 x 40cm

18.5" x 15.7"

31 x 24cm

12.2" x 9.4"

Large
Mount

72 x 60cm

28.3" x 23.6"

52 x 40cm

20.4" x 15.7"

Unframed prints come in a double mount with backing board in a sealed cellophane display bag so that all that is needed is the glass and outer moulding.

They can also be shipped with just the protected print itself rolled up in a heavy cardboard tube if preferred. Just drop me a message if so.

Chris :-)

 

Choose Size | Framed | Unframed: Small Framed

Museum quality art prints using archival inks created from my original canvas oil and acrylic paintings. I photograph and print these limited editions of 200 myself and the prints are available in three sizes both framed and unframed. Click on the print options and links above the Add to Cart button for more information.

A painting of McDaids Pub, Harry Street, just off Grafton Street, Dublin. A down to earth bar that serves good Guinness and has no loud music and is one of the pubs on the literary trail having been a local for many Irish writers over the years. The complementary cool blues in this painting cause the glowing yellow and orange lights to jump out and become a focus of attention.

McDaids was the favourite drinking spot of Irish literary legend Brendan Behan. Before it was a pub the building in which McDaids resides was the local morgue for Dublin City and was then later turned into a church before finally becoming a pub. J.P. Donleavy, the Irish American whose novel “The Ginger Man” was banned in both America and Ireland on grounds of obscenity, was a regular at McDaids. James Joyce’s short story “Grace” opens in McDaids.

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