Dodo / Dronte/ Raphus cucullatus – a print by F. W. Frohawk, 1905.
£10.70 – £38.30
High quality reproduction of an antique engraved and hand-coloured print by Frederick William Frohawk, published in 1905 in Lionel Rothschild’s “Extinct Birds”.
Printed area (image as on the main picture) measures:
Extra Large poster (or Canvas) 23.7×30.8 inch / 60.3×78.4 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Large poster (or Canvas) 18.2×23.7 inch / 46.4×60.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Medium poster (or Canvas) 11.7×15.2 inch / 29.7×38.6 cm (sheet size no less than A3 / 11.7×16.5 inch)
Small poster 8.3×10.8 inch / 21.0x 27.3 cm (sheet size no less than A4 / 8.3×11.7 inch)
Please select from drop-down box below.
Dodo / Dronte/ Raphus cucullatus – a print by F. W. Frohawk, 1905.
£10.70 – £38.30
High quality reproduction of an antique engraved and hand-coloured print by Frederick William Frohawk, published in 1905 in Lionel Rothschild’s “Extinct Birds”.
Printed area (image as on the main picture) measures:
Extra Large poster (or Canvas) 23.7×30.8 inch / 60.3×78.4 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Large poster (or Canvas) 18.2×23.7 inch / 46.4×60.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Medium poster (or Canvas) 11.7×15.2 inch / 29.7×38.6 cm (sheet size no less than A3 / 11.7×16.5 inch)
Small poster 8.3×10.8 inch / 21.0x 27.3 cm (sheet size no less than A4 / 8.3×11.7 inch)
Please select from drop-down box below.
Description
Dodo / Dronte / Raphus cucullatus – a print by Frederick William Frohawk, published in 1905 in Lionel Rothschild’s “Extinct Birds”.
The dodo (Raphus cucullatus) was a flightless bird endemic to the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius. This plate engraved by Frederick Frohawk and published in “Extinct Birds” was based on the picture by Roelandt Savery in Berlin, but the wings, tail and bill have been based partly on Pierre Witthoos’ picture of the white Dodo, and partly from anatomical examination. Extinct Birds (complete title: Extinct birds. An attempt to unite in one volume a short account of those Birds which have become extinct in historical times—that is, within the last six or seven hundred years. To which are added a few which still exist, but are on the verge of extinction.) is a book by Lionel Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild (1868 – 1937) which covers globally extinct and rare birds as well as hypothetical extinct species. Only 300 copies of the book were published in 1907 at Hutchinson and Co. in London.
Frederick William Frohawk (1861 – 1946) was an English zoological artist and lepidopterist. Frohawk was born at Brisley Hall, East Dereham, Norfolk, the son of a gentleman farmer. The youngest child in the family, his interest in drawing and natural history was nurtured by his mother. At seven he spotted and caught a rare pale clouded yellow butterfly. The family moved to Great Yarmouth and later Ipswich where he found many interesting butterflies. After the death of his father around 1873, the family moved to Croydon and later South Norwood. He went to school at Norwood College and during this time contracted typhoid leading to near blindness in one eye. In 1880 the family moved to Upper Norwood and here Frohawk concentrated on illustration and obtained his first commission for illustrating The Field. Frohawk was encouraged in his work by Lord Walter Rothschild, who later bought his water-colours of butterflies. He married Margaret Grant in June 1895 who died in 1907 leaving him to care for two daughters. In 1909 he married Mabel Jane Hart Bowman and they had a third daughter Valezina, named after a form of the silver-washed fritillary. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society in 1891.
This poster is a high quality “giclee” reproduction of a restored antique original, custom-printed on Standard Single-weight Matt Coated art paper 140gsm or Heavyweight Matt Coated art paper 230gsm (more of a thin card density), or superb Epson Matt Canvas 320gsm, according to your choice. We use the latest UltraChromeHDX pigment inks which guarantee 60 years of colour permanence (up to 200 years fade-proof for colour prints). This poster is suitable for mounting and framing, as well as direct display on a wall.
IMPORTANT: If you are going to frame this print we recommend art paper 230gsm or canvas 320gsm. The 140gsm art paper option makes sense if you wish to DIY-frame or to tack the poster to a wall without framing, due to it being lighter and more flexible. All three options are giclee prints of the same high quality.
POSTER PRINT QUALITY
Please note that our reproduction posters are made to order and every print is checked before posting. The images we use in most cases are scans of antique originals, professionally restored in order to remove the most evident stains, folds, tears and other damage. We strive to balance the restoration and saving the overall integrity and antique appearance of the original. Our restored images are unique and these prints can be purchased only from www.VictorianMaps.com.
There will be no watermark on your image but there might be a white border depending on aspect ratio of the original. Please note that when a large antique original is reduced to a smaller size print some text may not be readable. Please check our measurements: every poster has its own aspect ratio same as original and printed exactly as pictured.
Additional information
XLarge, Large, Medium, Small
Art Paper 140gsm, Art Paper 230gsm, Canvas 320gsm