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Food art on your walls


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69 replies to this topic

#31 Marmish

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Posted 01 December 2006 - 05:48 PM

Some day, when I have the disposable income to do so, I'm going to have this printed on a canvas:

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Right now, I've only had it (and some others like it) made into cards.

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We've had things printed on canvas from this site and been pretty pleased with them. A 16x20 on matte canvas, stretched and mounted is about $40.

#32 GTO

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Posted 01 December 2006 - 06:08 PM

I took this a few weeks ago, of some mixed nuts from a visiting European market. I used it as a desktop background for a while.
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Please take a quick look at my stuff.
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#33 Jensen

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Posted 02 December 2006 - 11:10 AM

We've had things printed on canvas from this site and been pretty pleased with them.  A 16x20 on matte canvas, stretched and mounted is about $40.

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Thanks for the link! The size I'd like would run me around $100 (times 2 since I have another similar image to accompany the asparagus).

Like I said...when I have the disposable income. :biggrin:

#34 thebaker

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Posted 03 December 2006 - 02:36 PM

The artist nancy colleary has great oil paintings of fruits etc
I have been saveing up to buy some
They hang in the restaurant that I work in and they just inspire so much



http://www.nancycolleary.com/

Edited by thebaker, 03 December 2006 - 02:37 PM.

I bake there for I am....

Make food ... not war

#35 ckruse

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Posted 03 December 2006 - 04:55 PM

I bought some calendars in france where each month was a food group so say december was bread it had 30 different kinds of bread on it. I had them laminated along with a repro of the last supper and a dining scene from the bayeux tapestry. The great thing is you dont have to put all twelve months up you can rotate them in and out.

#36 dividend

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Posted 04 December 2006 - 09:01 AM

My brother is a pretty good artist, so last year for Christmas he gave me homemade food art, in the form of 3 8-inch square little oil painting of bell peppers, red, green, and yellow. They're really awesome, and he nicely mounted them in nice black frames. I was blown away by his thoughtfullness and creativity. Everyone who sees them on my kitchen walls comments. They don't photograph well at all, unfortunately.

My best friend from forever is a photographer. I ordered two framed prints from her website, from this page:
http://www.kasphotog...lbum=Still_Life
I have the smashed tomato and the three martini glasses hanging on my walls.

I love the fact that I can cover my walls with the work of my talented family members and friends.

Edited by dividend, 04 December 2006 - 09:02 AM.

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#37 chefdog

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Posted 05 December 2006 - 01:28 AM

So I'm in this funky little bookstore/ cafe thing in teeny-tiny Bellingham, WA about 10 years ago, right? I'm kind of wandering around, trying to decide where to poke my nose next, when I saw it. Simple, with muted colors; clean, but by no means mint. It was an original poster (1949, I think?) advertising M.F.K. Fisher's translation of The Physiology of Taste ! I approached the owner of the little bookstore/ cafe thing in teeny-tiny Bellingham, WA and asked how much he wanted for the poster. I was told that he thought that maybe someone had inquired about it years ago, he vaguely remembered penciling a phone number on the back...perhaps he should try and call? Yes, there was a number, but lo! it was disconnected! I was given the poster (free of charge!) and it will remain one of my treasured possessions...
Ian Westbrook
Chef/ Explorateur


"The universe would be nothing were it not for life and all that lives must be fed."
-Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin

#38 kristin_71

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Posted 05 December 2006 - 01:05 PM

I have a picture of a clove of garlic in my kitchen. A simple reminder of my culture and that fact that pretty much all stuff that is good, is that way because of garlic! :biggrin:

#39 gariotin

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Posted 06 December 2006 - 04:51 PM

I sell cheese for a living and work out of a home office. Someone gave me a beautiful French cheese calendar a few years ago. When the year was over, I had 4 pages drymounted and have them over my desk. On the walls, I have beautiful framed posters of Spanish cheeses and French cheeses. I also love the Cook's Illustrated back covers and have the back of the door covered in those - just taped on up there.
I am just finishing a kitchen reno and when I was in Paris last month, found a store that sold vintage cooking items. They had a whole drawer full of old food labels and I scored some old camembert paper labels, along with some hand-painted cheese signs. Can't wait to hang those up!

#40 Kent Wang

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Posted 20 December 2006 - 12:51 PM

The Gin Lane and Beer Street engravings are pretty funny.

You can buy them for $40.

#41 Kim Shook

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Posted 20 December 2006 - 06:19 PM

I love the work by Lisa Caballero. Don't know that I will never have the money or the kitchen to host one of them. And anyway, I don't think that I could choose my favorite among them.

#42 SheenaGreena

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Posted 20 December 2006 - 06:57 PM

I have a clock in my kitchen with these guys on it:

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Not art work, but hey it's food related and very cute.

also, do grease stains count?
BEARS, BEETS, BATTLESTAR GALACTICA

#43 Reefpimp

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Posted 21 December 2006 - 12:31 AM

The line drawings on the back cover of Cook's Illustrated are always great. I'd love to have a whole series of those around the dining room.


I do, but in the kitchen. When they have a back cover I like, I buy two issues so I can frame the back of one, and keep the other to use. Some issues are better than others, true; but none are in point of fact bad. I have ::leaves room to check:: 13 different ones up. Didn't think I had that many.

Used to have a bunch of salt&pepper shakers in various vegetable shapes, but I gave my collection to my sister for a 10th anniversary present. Now the only non-print art I have is the kitchen design itself (poor) and the knives I made out of Damascus billets I bought from Dixie Gun Works a couple years ago. Got a French knife with a curly maple handle and a gun-blued bolster (soldered on) and a small santoku with a cocobolo handle and no bolster but a gun-blued blade.

Edited by Reefpimp, 21 December 2006 - 12:33 AM.



This whole love/hate thing would be a lot easier if it was just hate.

Bring me your finest food, stuffed with your second finest!

#44 JBN

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Posted 21 December 2006 - 09:27 AM

No art, but a framed recipe, business card, and handwritten note from the executive chef of a hotel in Bangkok. They served these outstanding rolls for breakfast that they called butter bread. I tracked down the chef and asked for the recipe thinking Fat Chance. The next day it was slipped under my door with a note reading "Enjoy and have fun, culinary greetings." Never did try the recipe (still intend to though), but love the message as well as the reminder of Thailand and the amazing meals I had there.

#45 Octaveman

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Posted 21 December 2006 - 10:50 AM

I took this a few weeks ago, of some mixed nuts from a visiting European market. I used it as a desktop background for a while.
Posted Image

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This is a great photo, GTO. I am no pro photographer by any means but the composition and focus effects are great. The variance in colors and size/shape of the nuts are very pleasing to the eye. I like it more than most food pics because of the depth of field. Gives more character than just a picture of a plate of food or a wine bottle. I love this photo. Think about entering it in a photo contest sometime. Very impressive.

My kitchen has hardly any wall space. The one wall that's bare has three of my nicest knives resting on cast iron hooks along with a small knife rack with my steak knives on them. There is also a small Japanese 3D kanji print to keep them company. I also have a small 6x8 print the same style as those prints at mimi's of an Italian cook holding a plate of fish with three cats on the gorund looking up at him. Very cute. That's it.

Edited by Octaveman, 21 December 2006 - 10:52 AM.

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#46 Kent Wang

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Posted 02 January 2007 - 06:51 PM

A distant relative of mine did this watercolor of lychees.

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#47 oneidaone

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 10:16 AM

Kent - that is really a lovely picture! I shall now go out back and tell my tree all
about it and hopefully it will bear fruit this year! A hui hou!
"You can't miss with a ham 'n' egger......"
Ervin D. Williams 9/1/1921 - 6/8/2004

#48 SuzySushi

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 11:30 AM

Kent - that is really a lovely picture! I shall now go out back and tell my tree all
about it and hopefully it will bear fruit this year!
A hui hou!

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:laugh: :laugh:

Hauoli makahiki hou!
SuzySushi

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#49 SuzySushi

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 11:37 AM

My kitchen is very small, but this is what's on the back wall:

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The painting was the original cover art for a trade magazine I used to write for -- the cover story was about Brazil.

The porcelain plate at the top left is a gift from a company that dealt in exotic reptile skins during my days as a shoe designer (hey, I've had a checkered career). It features a spoof recipe for "Cobra a l'Indienne."

Most of my refrigerator magnets are food-related, too.
SuzySushi

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#50 ldenney

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 12:45 PM

Some day, when I have the disposable income to do so, I'm going to have this printed on a canvas:

Posted Image

Right now, I've only had it (and some others like it) made into cards.

View Post



We've had things printed on canvas from this site and been pretty pleased with them. A 16x20 on matte canvas, stretched and mounted is about $40.

View Post



#51 ldenney

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Posted 03 January 2007 - 01:02 PM

I know I can be as dumb as a box of rocks when it comes to things computer, but I am unable to figure out how to add a photo to my post, and how to make it the proper size.

Any help would be appreciated. And speak slowly.

I would like to add a photo to this topic, so hopefully it is okay ask my question in this forum.

#52 divina

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Posted 08 January 2007 - 01:40 AM

I love fotography...and so this year finally thanks to flickr, put some of my favorite characters from the Central MArket on a calendar.

Stop by My blog and you can download it for free.

I had fun.. and will next do a food one, then a Florence one..

Buon 2007.

As a hint.. one of my friends couldn't afford creat food art, in galleries, so hired a kid to replicate images for her in oil on canvas... got some great art..- cheap!
hire a local kid in college and give them a chance!

#53 ddtchick

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Posted 25 January 2007 - 06:57 PM

Some of the food art I did, not on my walls but my counter-

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Another one, not food per se, but inspired by the vineyards in Montone, Italy -

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Edited by ddtchick, 25 January 2007 - 06:59 PM.

Aquarius (Jan 21-Feb 19): Cranky. And rude and tactless. - and a perfect description of me!


"Is there alcohol in this furniture polish? Mmmmm, tastes like I might die!" Roger the Alien, "American Dad"

#54 ddtchick

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Posted 25 January 2007 - 07:01 PM

...and I don't know why the second image is not showing up!!!
Aquarius (Jan 21-Feb 19): Cranky. And rude and tactless. - and a perfect description of me!


"Is there alcohol in this furniture polish? Mmmmm, tastes like I might die!" Roger the Alien, "American Dad"

#55 Habeas Brulee

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Posted 26 January 2007 - 08:04 AM

I had a calendar made with some of my food photography and recipes, and it's hanging on my wall now.

#56 Carolyn Tillie

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Posted 26 January 2007 - 08:36 AM

I have been bad this week. I am getting rid of all my old, 80s posters and have purchased high-end, expensive art. Charles Becker to be exact. I am thrilled to have THREE different still-lifes that are being reframed now to be delivered after my return from South America. One is a set of three strawberries, one a single large apple, and a third is a a green apple and a strawberry on a shelf.

The funny part was that when the BF and I went out, he liked the strawberries, I liked the apple, and - in trying to help us decide - the saleslady brought in the apple-strawberry combination and we realised we had to have all three! IŽll post pictures when they get hung and canŽt believe I am living a dream of finally investing in the art world.

#57 Fat Guy

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Posted 26 January 2007 - 08:37 AM

We're huge fans of vintage fruit crate labels. We bought a few on our honeymoon, in the Pacific Northwest, and have occasionally added to the collection. With nice matting and framing, these labels make for a fine display, and they're great pieces of Americana. We recently used four of them to decorate the nursery.

Our favorite is a label for Diving Girl California Apples. We later found out that the lithograph is part of the collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco:

http://search2.famsf...ml?record=18672

There are several websites specializing in these labels, such as:

http://www.fruitcratelabels.com

While some rare labels can get expensive, you can still get some really nice, pristine ones (they're still discovering caches of unused labels in old warehouses) for ten or twenty bucks. So they're a great way for folks on limited budgets to acquire some attractive, and different, art.
Steven A. Shaw aka "Fat Guy"
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#58 Mayhaw Man

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Posted 26 January 2007 - 09:23 AM

I'm with Steven on the fruit crate label deal. I picked up a number of these at a swap meet in Pamona a few years ago for not much money and had them matted and framed. I also have a number of photographs that I have taken over the years. I just added this one of a women in Appalachicola who was standing in front of a waterfront oyster shucking operation.

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Also, I just had my fabulous poster from the soon to be world famous Potlikker Film Festival matted and framed. It makes a handsome addition to my eclectic collection of stuff.
Brooks Hamaker, aka "Mayhaw Man"

There's a train everyday, leaving either way...

#59 Nicola Kountoupes

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Posted 07 March 2007 - 08:32 PM

I took these myself and have them hanging in the kitchen.

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Do any of you have photos or paintings of food hanging on your walls?

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oh yeah.
pomegranate project, by nicola kountoupes
plus my whole thesis project for my mfa revolves around filo dough as a substrate for my images.

I'll figure out how to post them on here...eventually.
nk

#60 harlanturk

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Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:36 PM

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I fancy myself a culinary photojournalist, and have been having shows of such works in cafes/galleries, the above photographs are from my BACK OF THE HOUSE Project.

I have number of my own images hanging in my house, and update my photos of the food world weekly, HARLANTURK.BLOGSPOT.COM.
Michael Harlan Turkell, PHOTOGRAPHER
"BACK OF THE HOUSE" Project, www.harlanturk.com , PLOG: harlanturk.blogspot.com