Skip to product information
1 of 1

World Nature Photography Awards

Charlotte Keast: Ankle bracelets

Charlotte Keast: Ankle bracelets

Regular price £24.95 GBP
Regular price Sale price £24.95 GBP
Sale Sold out
Tax included.

How to choose your wall art: 

First, select whether you’d like a fine art paper print or canvas and the appropriate size. Please check sizes carefully before ordering.

All our prints are printed using the Giclée method on a premium quality heavyweight fine art print material that has a smooth, clean finish. We chose this option rather than photo paper, as this museum-quality paper is extremely consistent and will give you a beautiful print that will last a lifetime. 

Once you’ve made your selection, you will need to decide whether you’d like it framed or unframed. 

Framed prints

Our framed prints come with a white mount and your choice of black, white or natural wood frames. We use classic box frames for our framed prints. The frame has a box profile measuring 20mm (front face) by 33mm (depth from wall). Each print comes with a white mount and is placed under a durable Perspex glaze.

Please note: the size listed refers to the size of the glaze and does not include the width of the frame. If you choose 30cmx40cm, this is the size of the glaze and not the image. The image will be smaller to fit inside the mount. 

Framed canvas

Our framed canvases use ‘floating’ frames, with the frame sitting approximately 5mm from the edge of the canvas helping to create a floating border.

Charlotte Keast: Ankle bracelets

An Asian elephant employed by anti-poaching authorities in Bardiya, Nepal, stands with her front two legs chained together. Her daughter was chained mere metres away but without the two being able to touch. For their own ‘protection’ from the wild elephants in the forest, these elephants spend the majority of their lives in this position, only being released for a few short hours to be ridden around on patrol. Whilst humans using elephants to patrol no doubt provide a crucial force against the poaching of species such as the Bengal tiger, the irony of enslaving one species to protect another should not be lost on any of us.

Image © Charlotte Keast

 

View full details