Red-headed Woodpecker Giclee Paper Print and Mat (17" x 11")

$45.00

The Red-headed Family features the striking Red-headed Woodpecker with its crimson head, ink-black and white wings, and brilliant white body. The parent perched on a dead oak branch with an adolescent flying into the land. The subject of this acrylic painting is a conversation starter since the population in Minnesota has decreased dramatically over the last 50 years. The artist is lucky to have a family return every spring to nest and share its beauty.

Giclee print reproduction on archival white paper (6" x 12" image). Conservation grade off-white mat (11" x 17").

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The Red-headed Family features the striking Red-headed Woodpecker with its crimson head, ink-black and white wings, and brilliant white body. The parent perched on a dead oak branch with an adolescent flying into the land. The subject of this acrylic painting is a conversation starter since the population in Minnesota has decreased dramatically over the last 50 years. The artist is lucky to have a family return every spring to nest and share its beauty.

Giclee print reproduction on archival white paper (6" x 12" image). Conservation grade off-white mat (11" x 17").

The Red-headed Family features the striking Red-headed Woodpecker with its crimson head, ink-black and white wings, and brilliant white body. The parent perched on a dead oak branch with an adolescent flying into the land. The subject of this acrylic painting is a conversation starter since the population in Minnesota has decreased dramatically over the last 50 years. The artist is lucky to have a family return every spring to nest and share its beauty.

Giclee print reproduction on archival white paper (6" x 12" image). Conservation grade off-white mat (11" x 17").

  • Giclee prints with archival pigmented inks

  • Highest level of color gamut available in printing (12 color printing)

  • Conservation grade off-white mat.

These birds don’t act quite like most other woodpeckers: they’re adept at catching insects in the air, and they eat lots of acorns and beech nuts, often hiding away extra food in tree crevices for later. This magnificent species has declined severely in the past half-century because of habitat loss and changes to its food supply.

—Cornell Lab of Ornithology