

Frame
Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions
Image:
6.50" x 8.00"
Overall:
6.50" x 8.00"
Chanel No. 5 in Watercolor Canvas Print

by Susan Maxwell Schmidt

$58.00
Product Details
Chanel No. 5 in Watercolor canvas print by Susan Maxwell Schmidt. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your image gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars (gallery wrap) or 5/8" x 5/8" stretcher bars (museum wrap). Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
Chanel No. 5 in Watercolor
A bottle of the luxurious Chanel No. 5 Eau du Parfum painted in digital watercolor, the iconic perfume brand... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Artist's Description
"Chanel No. 5 in Watercolor"
A bottle of the luxurious Chanel No. 5 Eau du Parfum painted in digital watercolor, the iconic perfume brand brought to life by the French fashion designer Coco Chanel in 1921 for her Chanel brand, which was later made the epitome of all contemporary fashion house fragrances by the charismatically eccentric and unfortunately late Karl Lagerfeld. Chanel No. 5, with its floral notes of jasmine and tuberose, was originally designed to appeal to modern-era flappers and their feminist (for the time) ideals. The "5" in the scent's name stems from not only the fifth formulation presented to Coco, the number actually also had a mystical connotation to her stemming from her early days in an orphanage run by a convent. The number five meant so much to her she even presented her fashion collections on the 5th of every May (5.5). The perfume was very exclusive when it was first introduced, it could only be purchased in Chanel's boutiques and you definitely had t...
About Susan Maxwell Schmidt

My mind lives in a rather strange world of its own, in a state which I tend to refer to as "delightfully twisted." Through my art, which I am vehemently determined to continue to create with as little outside influence as possible, I work tirelessly to interpret the concepts my mind creates in a moment-by-moment barrage of ideas that always seem to come faster than I can realize them in a tangible form. Though my artwork over the past 40 years has evolved from my early days of shooting on film to manifesting itself in many different forms of more contemporary media, from the delicate transparency of digital watercolor, to the no-holds-barred starkness of noir digital photography, to even the fanciful abstract-turned-conceptual properties...