Framed Resin Prints
I want to bring more to my work as a photographic artist. I have accumulated thousands of hours over the last fifteen years refining my own techniques; now I'm adding more of a personal touch by offering finished, ready-to-hang prints in a frame.
While living in Vietnam, I gathered knowledge and practised varnishing and resin techniques. Each frame is handmade by a local West Country framer, and a very professional local printer handles the prints. Both the framer and printer have high standards. I'm adding my individual attention by varnishing and pouring the resin into the frame. Each framed print comes with a signature and fingerprint on a vinyl sticker on the reverse of the artwork and an A5 declaration of authenticity certificate, which has my description of the artwork and is also signed and carries the fingerprint.
Please always remember that an image created by AI is made by something, not someone; therefore, it lacks the human imagination, integrity and hard work we all endeavour to put into every piece. I'm going the extra mile with my work and want to let you know everything is completed by hand and takes time to finish.
The process for my ready-to-hang framed resin Prints
Once I have my board-mounted print and handcrafted frame, it takes five days to complete each one with varnishing, sealing and a final resin pour. If you wish to order a framed print, this will be the reason it takes a while if we don't have it in stock, but it will also be worth the wait.
Traditional photographic editing software is not the same as artificial intelligence. When using conventional editing tools, every adjustment—such as exposure, contrast, colour balance, cropping, sharpening, or retouching—is made directly by the photographer. The software simply carries out the user's instructions and does not independently generate or invent image content. AI, by contrast, analyses data to make decisions or create new elements that were not originally present in the photograph. In traditional photo editing, the creative decisions remain entirely in the hands of the artist.