If you copy this HTML code into your web page, it will display the current listing as part of your page. You can adjust the height of the store area by editing the height value inside the iframe tag.
If you copy this HTML code into your web page, it will display your entire store as part of your page. You can adjust the height of the store area by editing the height value inside the iframe tag.
Kodak Professional Supra Endura Paper for our large Photo Prints and Posters.
Professional photo processing on Kodak's premium quality paper.
Endura prints and poster prints offer a beautiful texture with a subtle pearl-like finish on heavy weight pro stock paper.
We take extra care with processing to offer the highest contrast and deepest color saturation possible.
Every print is made for true gallery presentation.
The photograph popularly known as “Migrant Mother” has become an icon of the Great Depression. The compelling image of a mother and her children is actually one of a series of photographs that Dorothea Lange made in February or March of 1936 in Nipomo, California.
Whatever the woman, Florence Owens Thompson, thought of Lange's actions at the time, she came to regret that Lange ever made the photographs, which she felt permanently colored her with a “Grapes of Wrath” stereotype. Thompson, a Native American from Oklahoma, had already lived in California for a decade when Lange photographed her. The immediate popularity of the images in the press did nothing to alleviate the financial distress that had spurred the family to seek seasonal agricultural work. Contrary to the despairing immobility the famous image seems to embody, however, Thompson was an active participant in farm labor struggles in the 1930s, occasionally serving as an organizer. Her daughter later commented, “She was a very strong woman. She was a leader. That is one of the reasons she resented the photo—because it didn't show her in that light.”