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Created to celebrate the vibrant colors of summer, I designed this piece with local dahlias and a bounty of echinacea, foxglove, cornflowers and zinnias from my own garden.
A still life I made last April, using three varieties of fritillaria at their peak and the most stunning local parrot tulips. The spring peas, radishes and asparagus made this the perfect encapsulation of spring in a still life. There are so many little details to discover in this piece.
This print is 18”x24” with a 1/2” white border for easier matting, if desired, and framing.
There is a limited edition of this print in 30”x40” in the Limited Edition shop as well.
This piece was created with flowers leftover from a completely different shoot. The poppies were barely hanging on, the roses beginning to wilt. Florists will often tell you that flowers are most beautiful right before they drop, and this piece is a celebration of that, fallen petals and all.
Inspired by the abundance of beautiful flowers in early spring, this piece was created in conversation with Technicolor No. 1, celebrating the color and line of each flower in an electric and intentional way.
This arrangement is peak summer, with locally grown dahlias and vibrant tithonia and zinnias and a hint of native honeysuckle winding throughout.
Inspired by the paintings of Dutch painter Rachel Ruysch, this piece was my attempt to create a world that highlighted the beauty of nature in decay. Bittersweet berries crack open around freshly cut cantaloupe and kabocha squash; a cicada sheds its skin in the foreground of frame: a true feast for the eyes.
Inspired by the Dutch Masters, this print is a companion to an earlier image, Dutch No. 1. With this piece, I wanted to capture the evolution of spring in Georgia, and with it, the flowers that are blooming. Columbine, garden roses and the beginnings of peony season are featured here alongside earlier spring poppies. Flowers grown locally in GA by 3 Porch Farm, along with elements from my foraging adventures.
Inspired by the Dutch Masters, this print is a companion to an earlier image, Dutch No. 1. With this piece, I wanted to capture the evolution of spring in Georgia, and with it, the flowers that are blooming. Columbine, garden roses and the beginnings of peony season are featured here alongside earlier spring poppies. Flowers grown locally in GA by 3 Porch Farm, along with elements from my foraging adventures.
Inspired by the abundance of beautiful flowers in early spring, this piece is the first in a series celebrating the color and line of each flower in an electric and intentional way.
This piece celebrates the transition from late spring to summer; late spring flowers like cosmos, phlox, and peonies meet vibrant summer blooms like scabiosa and zinnias, styled atop vintage amber velvet fabric that echos the golden hue of the cosmos and the setting sun.
This piece was a collaborative effort; I collected flowers and greenery from friends around the city of Atlanta-roses from RK’s garden, greenery from an early morning walk with Mary, edible flowers and the sweetest pansies from Heather, snapdragons and honeysuckle from Kelley-and combined them with beautiful flowers grown locally by 3 Porch Farm. This piece was designed to reflect the abundance of blooms I had to work with, thanks to all those involved.
An enchanting wintry still life in the Dutch tradition, featuring exotic fruits, butterflies, quail eggs and an appropriate amount of luster dust. This piece looks beautiful framed in so many ways, but my favorite is a black frame inset with gold filament.
This is the piece that started it all: inspired by the paintings of the Dutch Masters, I created this piece using flowers from incredible local 3 Porch Farm and foraged elements from around my home. The result: a representation of early spring through flowers here in Georgia.
I created this piece on a cloudy day to celebrate the flowers as they aged: the epitome of spring, in abundance. Poppies, ranunculus and hellebores grown locally by 3 Porch Farm.
Inspired by the warmth of golden hued Baroque paintings, this still life is full of the most vibrant early spring blooms, with poppies, hyacinth, and muscari, against a custom backdrop painted to evoke an abstract landscape. This piece looks beautiful in a solid gold frame.
A companion image to Still Life in White & Blue, in my favorite color: red. Foxgloves, nerine lilies, ranunculus, delicate garden roses spill over the edge of the vase onto draped amber and blue velvet fabrics, with an abundance of fruits (and bugs!) if you look closely.
An antique Ormolu box gifted to me by dear friends, filled with Dutch parrot tulips and the sweetest daffodils grown locally by 3 Porch Farm.
This print is 12”x16” with a ½” border for framing.