Blooming Lotus Flowers | 1920–1930 by Ohara Koson
Pale pink lotus rise from broad green pads in this kachō-e design by Ohara Koson (1877–1945), master of the shin-hanga movement. The lotus — a long-standing emblem of purity in East Asian art — glows against a subtle, misted background, rendered with the delicate observation that made Koson’s nature prints internationally collected.
Each print is made to order as an archival giclée. Choose your paper: a heavyweight 285 gsm textured fine-art stock (our Museum weight) or a lighter 200 gsm matte (Studio) — in sizes from roughly 28×43 cm to 61×91 cm (shown in inches at checkout). And because we’re a Dublin framing studio first, you can bring your print into the workshop to have it mounted and framed by hand, with 10% off a bespoke frame.
Pale pink lotus rise from broad green pads in this kachō-e design by Ohara Koson (1877–1945), master of the shin-hanga movement. The lotus — a long-standing emblem of purity in East Asian art — glows against a subtle, misted background, rendered with the delicate observation that made Koson’s nature prints internationally collected.
Each print is made to order as an archival giclée. Choose your paper: a heavyweight 285 gsm textured fine-art stock (our Museum weight) or a lighter 200 gsm matte (Studio) — in sizes from roughly 28×43 cm to 61×91 cm (shown in inches at checkout). And because we’re a Dublin framing studio first, you can bring your print into the workshop to have it mounted and framed by hand, with 10% off a bespoke frame.