Lammas Day Hare Papercut

£25.00
In this design I wanted to convey a sense of the peace that settles over the fields when the harvest has been brought in and the hay bales stand in the fields under a crescent moon. Putting a hare at its centre was the obvious choice as hares in many ways symbolise the life and magic of the seasons.
Lammas Day celebrates the grain harvest and falls on August 1, which is a special day for me. Harvest and all its associated traditions have always played a big part in rural communities and I love the feeling of plenty and security that you get from a bright display of corn, barley and homegrown fruit and vegetables. Its name comes from the Anglo-Saxon word meaning ‘loaf-mass’ and its also known as the Celtic festival of Lugnasad.

This design is deliberately cut in black on soft white as it reminds me a little of a woodcut.

It is mounted ready to fit in a 10x8 inch frame.
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In this design I wanted to convey a sense of the peace that settles over the fields when the harvest has been brought in and the hay bales stand in the fields under a crescent moon. Putting a hare at its centre was the obvious choice as hares in many ways symbolise the life and magic of the seasons.
Lammas Day celebrates the grain harvest and falls on August 1, which is a special day for me. Harvest and all its associated traditions have always played a big part in rural communities and I love the feeling of plenty and security that you get from a bright display of corn, barley and homegrown fruit and vegetables. Its name comes from the Anglo-Saxon word meaning ‘loaf-mass’ and its also known as the Celtic festival of Lugnasad.

This design is deliberately cut in black on soft white as it reminds me a little of a woodcut.

It is mounted ready to fit in a 10x8 inch frame.
In this design I wanted to convey a sense of the peace that settles over the fields when the harvest has been brought in and the hay bales stand in the fields under a crescent moon. Putting a hare at its centre was the obvious choice as hares in many ways symbolise the life and magic of the seasons.
Lammas Day celebrates the grain harvest and falls on August 1, which is a special day for me. Harvest and all its associated traditions have always played a big part in rural communities and I love the feeling of plenty and security that you get from a bright display of corn, barley and homegrown fruit and vegetables. Its name comes from the Anglo-Saxon word meaning ‘loaf-mass’ and its also known as the Celtic festival of Lugnasad.

This design is deliberately cut in black on soft white as it reminds me a little of a woodcut.

It is mounted ready to fit in a 10x8 inch frame.