Product Description
Keeping your iPhone or Samsung Galaxy phone protected has never looked this good! Slim and impact-resistant, our a hard-shell phone cases combine value with style. The hard-shell case is easy to snap on and provides an important layer of impact-resistance to your phone. Tali’s one-of-a-kind painterly original artwork is seamlessly printed directly onto the case, wrapping around the edges for easy grip and a gorgeous presentation. This fun case keeps your phone snug and safe while giving you full and direct access to all of the features on your phone.
For extra protection, our tough case includes a flexible inner black rubber liner to the impact resistant hard shell.
Our one-of-a-kind artist phone cases are available for any iPhones model, even the latest iPhone 12. Each case is custom manufactured in 3-4 days and delivered to your doorstep with Tali’s 30 day money-back guarantee.
Image Description
Impressionist portrait of a young woman in a red silk gown by Oregon contemporary impressionist and modern portrait artist Talya Johnson.
View more Artistic Home Decor Accesories featuring this original oil painting.Behind the Canvas
I was so drawn to this model's strength, to the line of her red silk gown, her beautiful dancer's hands fiddling with peacock feathers that were part of the set-up. I simplified the colors to bring all the attention to the colors red and gold. It was a challenging painting to complete--outside of my comfort zone both in style and content.
To me, red has always symbolized both strength and mortality. It symbolizes the earth, the ground from which were created and which we will return to. Gold is my color for divinity, perfection, or high value. It's also a color of power. The circular patterns, "s" curves, and repeating shapes in the composition and placement of the flowers were all set to lead the viewers eyes, and cement the eternal nature of my subject. I attempted to point out, that no matter how divine our eternal natures, this mortal life will slip through all of our fingers. Yet, the divinity within each of will remain.
As the bloom and dreams of our youth fade, let us remember that common mortal and divine thread that knits us to one another, and to our Maker.