Bowling - Personalized Unique Framed Gift – Unique Framed Gifts

Bowling

Bowling - Personalized Unique Framed Gift
Bowling - Unique Framed Gift
Bowling
Bowling

See How They're Made


Bowling


Size: 10 x 13
Regular price $49.95 $0.00 with Free Shipping!

Each frame uses authentic US Postal stamps surrounded by a brief write-up and printed art, which embrace the subject or occupation.

Free Gift Included with All Orders! Click Here

A Perfect Gift

  • Great for Birthdays, Retirements, Graduations, Achievements, Holidays, Or just to say thank you.
  • Even great for your personal collection.

Ready To Hang

  • Framed in a rich mahogany colored polystyrene frame.
  • Double matted with a top mat and a hint of burgundy for the bottom mat.
  • Complete with acrylic glass, a dust cover for the back, a sawtooth hanger and protective wall bumpers.

Unique Framed Gifts uses real United States Postal Service stamps surrounded by printed words that embrace the subject and enhance the work while surrounded by a camel top mat and a hint of burgundy for the bottom mat. The mahogany colored polystyrene frame comes ready to hang for all to view in an office, den, school or nearly anywhere. A truly unique and perfect gift created for the person, company or organization passionate about the story they closely relate to, while appreciating quality work by dedicated American art framers. Each stamp is pulled by hand and mounted onto the print with a spray glue mount, since most stamps are canceled no two stamps are exactly the same and the product you receive may vary slightly from the product image.

A Glimpse Of The Past Through The Bowling Collection - Bowling includes many sports that use an "underhand toss of an object at a target object or objects." Thus we have bowling, tenpins, as we know it, but also ninepins, lawn bowling, duckpin bowling, candlepin bowling, skittles, table skittles, hood skittles, long alley, old English skittles and half bowl. The game can be traced as far as 7,000 years to the tomb of an Egyptian child where a circular stone and pin-like objects were found. Many other cultures, such as Polynesian, Haida Indians, and Navajo have their versions of the game, but the modern games all originated in the 4th century with Germanic people. Shakespeare mentioned loggats, early skittles, in Hamlet. Irving described ninepins in Rip Van Winkle, and Martin Luther standardized the game by requiring only nine pins, the name entering the English language in 1580. It was President Nixon that first built a bowling alley in the White House. Strike!

See How They're Made


Share this Product


More from this collection