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Troll with child illustration by John Bauer. print
John Bauer’s troll illustrations, created in the early 1900s for the Swedish fairy-tale annual Among Gnomes and Trolls (Bland tomtar och troll), are among the most iconic images in Scandinavian folklore art. Working primarily in watercolor...Regular price From $23.27 -
When Susan sews illustration by Lilian Price Hacker
Lilian Price Hacker (often signing her work “L.P.H.”) was an early-20th-century British illustrator known for charming drawings used in children’s books, gift books, and postcard series. Her best-known work is the Susan series (1912), a collection...Regular price From $20.39 -
John Bauer vintage illustration . Troll surrounded by wolves.
John Bauer (1882–1918) solidified his reputation through evocative fairy‑tale imagery in the annual Bland tomtar och troll, where he masterfully fused Romantic nationalism, Nordic folklore, and naturalism. His trolls are rooted in the Scandinavian forest—layered in moss,...Regular price From $23.42 -
About Robins vintage cute bird illustration by Lady Lindsay II
About Robins” by Lady Lindsay is a delicate bird illustration created in the late 19th century as part of Victorian natural-history art. The work depicts robins perched among branches, rendered with careful attention to feather texture...Regular price From $20.76 -
Ariel on a bat's back illustration by Louis Rhead
Ariel on a Bat’s Back by Louis Rhead is a decorative illustration inspired by William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, created in the late 19th to early 20th century. Executed in Rhead’s distinctive Art Nouveau style, the work...Regular price From $20.08 -
John Bauer vintage illustration print . From the fairy tale Leap the Elk and the Little Princess Cottongrass
John Bauer, a Swedish illustrator and painter, is best remembered for his evocative fairy tale imagery in the early 1900s. His work in Bland tomtar och troll brought to life the rich tapestry of Scandinavian folklore...Regular price From $23.42
What the illustrator adds is not just what is seen, but what is felt."
— Maurice Sendak