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Church Acrylic Print featuring the photograph Grace Presbyterian Church by Jeremy Butler

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Grace Presbyterian Church Acrylic Print

Jeremy Butler

by Jeremy Butler

Small Image

$174.00

Product Details

Grace Presbyterian Church acrylic print by Jeremy Butler.   Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.

Design Details

Grace Presbyterian Church, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, is seen at night. Photographed January 1, 2025 with a Nikon Z 8 camera: 30 seconds at f/10, 34mm... more

Ships Within

3 - 4 business days

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Acrylic Print Tags

acrylic prints architecture acrylic prints alabama acrylic prints church acrylic prints night acrylic prints church building acrylic prints church architecture acrylic prints christianity acrylic prints

Photograph Tags

photographs architecture photos alabama photos church photos night photos church building photos church architecture photos christianity photos

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Artist's Description

Grace Presbyterian Church, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, is seen at night. Photographed January 1, 2025 with a Nikon Z 8 camera: 30 seconds at f/10, 34mm lens, IOS 100.

Copyright 2025 Jeremy Butler. Signed certificate of authenticity available upon request.

About Jeremy Butler

Jeremy Butler

Jeremy Butler set up a darkroom in his parents' utility room while in high school in Phoenix, around 1970. He pestered his friends relentlessly and ruthlessly throughout the 1970s--constantly thrusting the camera in their faces. But he never could afford to print all the images on some 100 contact sheets. Now that he has a scanner, he's gone wild rediscovering the images he shot during that decade. I guess it's just the law of averages that some of them are quite good. In the 1980s, Jeremy began shooting more color film. He had no access to a black-and-white darkroom and so the impetus to shoot B&W gradually faded. And he was an early convert to digital photography as the 20th century came to a close. These black-and-white images...

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