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Digital Round Beach Towel featuring the photograph Train Crossing the Old Portageville Bridge by Tom Brickhouse

Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.

The watermark at the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final product.

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Train Crossing the Old Portageville Bridge Round Beach Towel

Tom Brickhouse

by Tom Brickhouse

$85.00

This product is currently out of stock.

Image Size

 
 

Product Details

Here it is... the towel that's taking the internet by storm.   Our round beach towels are 60" in diameter and made from ultra-soft plush microfiber with a 100% cotton back.   Perfect for a day at the beach, a picnic, an outdoor music festival, or just general home decor.   This versatile summer essential is a must-have this season!

Design Details

This bridge was constructed in 1875. It was an iron structure that consisted of 13 open-deck spans totaling 819 feet carrying a single track 235 feet... more

Dimensions

60" Diameter Not Including Tassles

Care Instructions

Machine wash cold and tumble dry with low heat.

Ships Within

2 - 3 business days

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Train Crossing the Old Portageville Bridge Photograph by Tom Brickhouse

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Round Beach Towel Tags

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Photograph Tags

photographs bridge photos train photos landscape photos waterfall photos digital photos color photos letchworth photos trestle photos

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Artist's Description

This bridge was constructed in 1875. It was an iron structure that consisted of 13 open-deck spans totaling 819 feet carrying a single track 235 feet above the Genesee River Gorge, Letchworth State Park, NY. It has been replaced by a new arch bridge.

About Tom Brickhouse

Tom Brickhouse

In my youth I would watch my dad in his makeshift darkroom developing photographs of the family. It seemed like magic when, in the red glow of the safelight, the image would appear from a blank piece of paper immersed in the developing tray. I was hooked. That was when I was still in high school, over 40 years ago. I have been taking pictures ever since. I attended Virginia Commonwealth University for a year and a half. At that time VCU didn't even offer photography as a course let alone a major so I ended up majoring in sculpture in order to do photography. If that sounds crazy, just remember it was the seventies. Any way I soon realized that college was not going to take me where I wanted to go. For the next 30 years I continued to...

 

$85.00