• Two Devils Putting the World to Rights in Orange – Lino Print

    Water-based red or orange (select from drop down menu) matte ink print on white acid free 220gsm cartridge paper, hand-hand pressed with a spoon and touched up by hand also to give it a consistent tone all over.

    (Watermark only included to protect the online image, the print will only have edition number, title if needed and it will be signed by myself.)

    Size of the image is approx. 15 x 10 cm

    Size of the mount is approx. 22 x 18.5 cm

    Limited edition of 20 prints in the orange colour scheme. Delivered mounted and wrapped in cellophane.

    All UK-bound items are sent 1st class delivery, signed for. Please contact me if you would prefer another method.

    To care for you print, please keep it out of direct sunlight and away from moisture.

  • The Harbourside Bucca – Cornish Spirit – Limited Edition Lino Print

    Based in Cornwall in the darker time of the year, with glimmers of light in the form of the village fairy lights, illuminated lighthouse, starlight and full moon, we quake in our boots at the howling and whooping of the local buccas, (Cornish devils or earth spirits) whose calls can be heard in certain coves and areas of villages on particularly stormy nights. The scene is also illuminated with a gigantic pair of glowing eyes and moonlit details including large fangs. However, he may well be harmless and a spirit who watches over fishermen, who would often leave offerings of fish in a designated area for the bucca. Based on an amalgamation of stories from the Newlun area and places with “bucca” in the place name”.

  • “You May Call Me ‘Captain'” – Tarraway – A5 Art Print

    This fellow is a Cornish Rumplestiltskin style version of a Devil, who appears in an old Cornish Christmas play or a guise dance called “Duffy and the Devil” originally from the Penwith area, specifically St Buryan.

    Also known as drolls, this story involves a girl, called Duffy who is taken in by Squire Lovell of Trove, and set to spinning yarn after claiming she can make the finest stockings. This, however is untrue, and she makes a pact with a Bucca (Cornish meaning: Devil) that he should spin the yarnin return for joining him after three years has passed, unless she can tell him his name upon asking, if she couldn’t, she was his. In a sneaky bid to gain his name she addressed him as “Mister what do I call ‘ee?” To which he cunningly responds “You may call me Captain” from Duffy and the Bucca or Duffy and the Devil.

    Also Available in a double pack with the Vampire and Sphinx cat in this shop.

     

  • Vampire & Devil – A5 Art Print Double Feature

    One fellow is a Cornish Rumplestiltskin style version of a Devil, who appears in an old Cornish Christmas play or a guise dance called “Duffy and the Devil” originally from the Penwith area, specifically St Buryan.

    Also known as drolls, this story involves a girl, called Duffy who is taken in by Squire Lovell of Trove, and set to spinning yarn after claiming she can make the finest stockings. This, however is untrue, and she makes a pact with a Bucca (Cornish meaning: Devil) that he should spin the yarnin return for joining him after three years has passed, unless she can tell him his name upon asking, if she couldn’t, she was his. In a sneaky bid to gain his name she addressed him as “Mister what do I call ‘ee?” To which he cunningly responds “You may call me Captain” from Duffy and the Bucca or Duffy and the Devil. 

    The other uses his knowledge of scrying to see what the world has in store for him, he did not see his familiar giving him a surprise, and so angry for a little cat

     

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