A professional graphic designer who uses her background in art history and restoration to create everyday objects you can enjoy in your home or as wearable art. It's a joy to bring the best art and design of ages past into everyday life, plus invitations and DIY party projects. If you don't already share my love for artists and illustrators such as Alphonse Mucha, Edmund Dulac, Beatrix Potter, Carl Larsson and John Tenniel, perhaps you'll discover a new enthusiasm.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Carl Larsson Christmas Tree Gift Tags - Gift Enclosure Cards

 

Carl Larsson Christmas Tree Gift Tags Enclosure Cards

Carl Larsson Christmas Tree Gift Tags Enclosure Cards

Carl Larsson Juletræ (Christmas Tree) 1917

These lovely gift tags or gift enclosure cards add a touch of Old World charm to your gift wrapping. For hang tags, just punch a hole (these look cool when the hole is punched in the upper left corner).

Gift enclosure cards are always tasteful and appreciated . And they are practical, too, as gift tags sometimes get separated from the gift during the all the merry making and holiday hubbub.

If you'd like to personalize the back (or change it to another language), simply delete the top image and type in your own text.

Looking at Larsson's paintings always leaves me feeling refreshed, and this one is no exception. I love the graceful lines, the feeling of calm anticipation and the sense of a happy family this painting evokes.

Description: A pretty little blond girl in traditional folk costume stands on a chair to add a candle to the Christmas tree.

Matching note cards, address labels, stickers and more are available in my gallery's Holiday and Winter Collection.

About the artist: Larsson, Carl (b Stockholm, 28 May 1853; d Falun, 22 Jan. 1919) was a Swedish painter, illustrator, printmaker, and writer. His work included numerous portraits and book illustrations, as well as several large murals (the best known are those on Sweden's artistic history in the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, 1896), but he is now remembered mainly for his watercolors of the idyllic life he enjoyed in his now-famous house in the village of Sundborn with his wife Karin and their eight children.

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