





Young boy on a tree
- Details
- Delivery & Returns
- About custom prints
DELIVERY
- UK standard delivery £5
(FREE on orders £60 and over*)
(3 – 6 working days) - Europe standard delivery £20
- Rest of the world standard delivery £30
RETURNS
If you are not completely satisfied with your item you may return it within 28 days for a full refund.
PAPER:
We use fine art paper sourced from UK paper mills for our prints. The paper type has been chosen to best suit the original artwork.
MOUNT:
Acid free, extra thick smooth white mount board with a white core.
COPYRIGHT:
Please note that a copyright line is included under the image.
GLAZING:
Clear acrylic. We use clear acrylic glazing for safety and longevity.
FRAMING:
Finished and framed by hand in Sussex by skilled craftsmen using responsibly sourced solid wood mouldings. The finished product has a taped back and is supplied ready to hang.
PACKAGING:
Each print is made-to-order and carefully packaged to ensure safe transportation.
Prints and frames handmade in England
V&A Custom Prints are high quality art prints of images from across the V&A collections. From Japanese woodblock prints to book illustration, textile designs and photography this collection of prints offers a glimpse into the rich and diverse nature of the V&A. The process is simple: select an image, choose your preferred size and frame and then place your order. Each artwork is giclée printed using archival quality inks. Made in England on the Sussex coast, our prints are hand finished and framed by skilled craftsmen using responsibly sourced solid wood mouldings and carefully packaged and delivered directly to your door.

Curtis Moffat
Curtis Moffat was born in 1887 into a wealthy New York family. He was raised in Brittany and attended boarding school in the United States. After a brief diplomatic career, he studied painting in New York and from 1913-1914 at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. In Paris during the 1920s, Moffat collaborated with Man Ray, one of several avant-garde artists to revive the photogram, which was originally used at the invention of photography in the 1830s. Moffat's photograms are among the earliest examples of the 20th-century interest in camera-less, abstract photography.