

Don't Let The Fire Kill The Sky Metal Print

by Megan Hale

$68.00
Product Details
Don't Let The Fire Kill The Sky metal print by Megan Hale. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of a metal print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 1/16" thick aluminum. The aluminum sheet is offset from the wall by a 3/4" thick wooden frame which is attached to the back. The high gloss of the aluminum sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results.
Design Details
In the grand tapestry of existence, where the cosmos dances in vibrant reds and blues, there's a peculiar beauty to the chaos. Imagine a canvas where... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products

Painting

Canvas Print

Framed Print

Art Print

Poster

Metal Print

Acrylic Print

Wood Print

Greeting Card

iPhone Case

Throw Pillow

Duvet Cover

Shower Curtain

Tote Bag

Round Beach Towel

Zip Pouch

Beach Towel

Weekender Tote Bag

Portable Battery Charger

Bath Towel

Apparel

Coffee Mug

Yoga Mat

Spiral Notebook

Fleece Blanket

Tapestry

Jigsaw Puzzle

Sticker

Ornament
Metal Print Tags
Painting Tags
Comments (1)
Artist's Description
In the grand tapestry of existence, where the cosmos dances in vibrant reds and blues, there's a peculiar beauty to the chaos. Imagine a canvas where swirls of life and marbling patterns of existence play out in a harmonious cacophony, each stroke representing the fiery trials and the serene aftermath. There, amidst the abstract and the literal, stands a lone tree—a silent witness to the ebb and flow of climate's whimsy. It's a bittersweet symphony, this cycle of destruction and rebirth, much like the laughter that bubbles up at the end of a good cry. Life, with all its depth and movement, is an art form, ever resilient, ever enduring.
About Megan Hale

Painting is therapeutic for me. I express my trauma, recovery, fear of improving, hope, despair, profound shame, anger, true joy, newfound sexuality, and qualities in myself I never knew existed. I am breaking through and processing. I love seeing my artwork evolve with my mental health. Sometimes, I imagine breaking through a black-painted window and escaping a dark room, a lightless place filled with razors and broken mirrors. Outside, there are shards of glass everywhere. It is still painful, but I finally escaped. And the wounds will heal. They are healing. I pour my soul into my paintings because I must stay grounded. My parts, my emotions. I urgently and compassionately create visual representations of them because if I don't, the...
John Kirkland
Nice! l/f