Frame
Top Mat
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Dimensions
Image:
12.00" x 8.00"
Overall:
12.00" x 8.00"
The Road To Kamakou Canvas Print
by James Temple
Product Details
The Road To Kamakou canvas print by James Temple. 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
The road to Kamakou cuts a swath through verdant pastureland that’s been refreshed by recent heavy rains. The partially cloud-obscured summit of... more
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3 - 4 business days
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Comments (5)
Artist's Description
The road to Kamakou cuts a swath through verdant pastureland that’s been refreshed by recent heavy rains. The partially cloud-obscured summit of Kamakou, Moloka‘i’s highest mountain peak looms mightily in the distance.
Kamakou is the highest peak on the island of Molokai, at 4,961 feet. It is estimated to contain more than 200 rare native Hawaiian plants, many of which exists only in this part of the world. The rain forest of Kamakou is like no other forest on the planet.
Established in 1983, Kamakou Preserve was The Nature Conservancy’s first conservation easement in Hawai‘i, totaling 2,774 acres. Kamakou is part of the East Moloka‘i Watershed, which encompasses more than 30,000 acres of rain-forested mountains, remote valleys, and towering sea cliffs. At the heart of Kamakou is the origin of Moloka‘i’s primary irrigation system; a five-mile tunnel continuously delivers fresh water from the source at Kamakou to the 1.4 billion-gallon Kualapu‘u Rese...
About James Temple
I've lived in Hawaii since 2002, 1200 feet above sea level, on the small rural island of Moloka'i. It is very quiet here, with only about 7,400 residents. I appreciate the quiet life after spending 35 years as a commercial illustrator, senior art director and design director for major advertising agencies and design studios in Chicago, San Francisco and Palo Alto California. I've always loved cooking. In 2002 that love led me to a degree in the Culinary Arts just before moving to Hawaii. Since then I designed and built a house, worked in local restaurants, self-published three cookbooks, and took up photography as a hobby. Now retired, I spend most of my time developing recipes and photographing them, plus researching and writing...
$70.00
Sunil Kapadia
Wonderful. LF
James Temple replied:
Thanks Sunil!
Georgia Mizuleva
So fabulous.
James Temple replied:
Thanks Georgia
Pat Purdy
Gorgeous photo James.
James Temple replied:
Hey Pat! Thanks for dropping in, and for the comment!
Heidi Fickinger
Beautiful - perfectly captures the sweep of the mauna to the sea, James.
James Temple replied:
Aloha Heidi, it was a rainy day yesterday... so beautiful! Thanks again for your comments!
Jane M Dahl
Such a beautiful and special place. My it be preserved and protected for all time. Great capture, James. Featured in Hawaiiana.
James Temple replied:
Mahalo Jane, I pulled my car over to the side of the road yesterday to capture this image.