Art that captures the history, drama and passion of the wonderful sport of cycling.
We are pleased to be able to partner with Ingoart to offer the wonderfully inventive cycling artwork of Pete English.
All prints are available in two sizes, detailed below the image. Be sure to click a PayPal button for the print size you want AND a PayPal button for the shipping fee to your particular country.
YELLOW FEVER
“Babies, birds, bees, butterflies and bikes, the Tour is passing through and its time to celebrate. The Yellow Jersey is stamping his authority on the race and looking cool.”
DETAILS:
588mm x 415mm Limited Edition Giclée Print – £49.99
A Limited Edition print of 250 signed and numbered.
The Giclée process is a high quality print process used by art institutes throughout the world. It ensures exceptional colour accuracy and captures the finest detail. The print is on matte acid free 300gsm stock.
Shipping inside UK
Shipping to Rest of World
420mm x 297mm (A3) Print – £12.99
This finely detailed image is checked for colour accuracy and sharpness and printed on matte acid-free 300gsm stock.
Shipping inside UK
Shipping to Rest of World
Ingoart is the creation of Lincoln born Pete English, an avid cycling enthusiast, (obviously) and Velo Club Lincoln member. He’s been a fan of cycling since the age of 15 and raced on and off over the years learning how to lose gracefully and just occasionally experience the heady highs of winning a local bike race.
After studying Graphic Design at Kingston Upon Thames in the 70’s, he worked in various disciplines within theindustry, ranging from Visualising for ad agencies to, in later years, designing e-commerce web sites. Just these two examples span over 30 years of progress and reflect the technological changes in the design industry, moving from Cow Gum, Rotring pens and Magic Markers to the revolutionary Apple Macintosh.
The ability to draw was always a big advantage in the earlier days especially in visualisation and that’s how he approaches the work today. Each artwork starts out as an idea scribbled on paper and then is gradually researched, designed and perfected in pencil (with lots of rubbing out, too!) These final images are scanned and transferred onto the computer where they are redrawn and colour is added to produce the finished artwork you see on Ingoart.
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