


Kanzan Cherry I 12x12 Gallery Wrapped Canvas Print
Details: 12” x 12” (plus 2” deep) gallery wrapped canvas print that comes ready-to-hang with a sawtooth hanger, along with bumpers on the bottom to protect your walls and keep your art nice and even. Locally printed and finished in Raleigh, North Carolina.
From arborday.org: Named after a mountain in Japan, the Kanzan (Kwanzan) cherry tree is native to China, Japan and Korea. The original name is 'Sekiyama,' but it is rarely used. Introduced to America in 1903, it was made famous by the glorious floral displays at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D.C.
I photographed the double-flowering, fluffy pink blossoms on this cherry tree cultivar in Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia in the spring of 2022. The petals created a pink snow as they spun in the wind and fell to the ground, making a bright carpet on the ground around the trees.
Details: 12” x 12” (plus 2” deep) gallery wrapped canvas print that comes ready-to-hang with a sawtooth hanger, along with bumpers on the bottom to protect your walls and keep your art nice and even. Locally printed and finished in Raleigh, North Carolina.
From arborday.org: Named after a mountain in Japan, the Kanzan (Kwanzan) cherry tree is native to China, Japan and Korea. The original name is 'Sekiyama,' but it is rarely used. Introduced to America in 1903, it was made famous by the glorious floral displays at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D.C.
I photographed the double-flowering, fluffy pink blossoms on this cherry tree cultivar in Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia in the spring of 2022. The petals created a pink snow as they spun in the wind and fell to the ground, making a bright carpet on the ground around the trees.
Details: 12” x 12” (plus 2” deep) gallery wrapped canvas print that comes ready-to-hang with a sawtooth hanger, along with bumpers on the bottom to protect your walls and keep your art nice and even. Locally printed and finished in Raleigh, North Carolina.
From arborday.org: Named after a mountain in Japan, the Kanzan (Kwanzan) cherry tree is native to China, Japan and Korea. The original name is 'Sekiyama,' but it is rarely used. Introduced to America in 1903, it was made famous by the glorious floral displays at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D.C.
I photographed the double-flowering, fluffy pink blossoms on this cherry tree cultivar in Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia in the spring of 2022. The petals created a pink snow as they spun in the wind and fell to the ground, making a bright carpet on the ground around the trees.
Questions about framing or something else? Read the answers to Frequently Asked Questions here.