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by Keith Stokes
$37.97
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Product Details
Challenge your brain with a jigsaw puzzle designed by an independent artist! Our puzzles are made from premium 0.2" thick paper stock and include a semi-gloss coating on the top surface to make the image pop. Puzzles are available in two different sizes, and each puzzle includes a puzzle box with the artwork printed on the top for safe storage when you're not puzzling. The puzzle pieces are unique shapes.
Design Details
St. Ignace lighthouse was moved to the old Chief railroad dock in St. Ignace, Michigan in 2006. The 52 foot tall light is not an aid to navigation.... more
Care Instructions
Store the puzzle in the provided box at room temperature with low humidity.
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
St. Ignace lighthouse was moved to the old Chief railroad dock in St. Ignace, Michigan in 2006. The 52 foot tall light is not an aid to navigation. The ruins in the foreground were an elevator which was used to load the railroad ferries when the operated between Michigan's Upper Peninsula and Lower Peninsula. The elevator collapsed in August of 2011. It was similar to the one used in Mackinaw City which appears in this photo of the Mackinaw Maritime Museum: http://keith-stokes.artistwebsites.com/featured/uscgc-mackinaw-framed-by-railroad-elevator-keith-stokes.html
This photograph was taken on September 3, 2011 with a Canon PowerShot IX20 IS set with lens aperture at F/4, shutter speed 1/640 second and ISO-80.
Keith Stokes usually has a camera in his hand - photographing Mackinaw City & Mackinac Island in northern Michigan for MightyMac.org, Kansas & Kansas City for KansasTravel.org and science fiction conventions for MidAmericon.org. His photos appear regularly in Locus Magazine, the Food Channel Magazine and other publications and books. His photograph of Pillsbury Crossing was the cover of a recent K-Stater Magazine.
$37.97
Keith Stokes
Thank you, Charles. The orignal framework before the colapse was a striking arch. All of the foreground material has since been removed.
Charles Robinson
What an intriguing view. Great composition, Keith. A like and a favorite. I would not have seen it as belonging in the Tunnels and Arches Group, but there is no denying that there are, at least, several "arches."
Tara Lynn
Nice Capture
Keith Stokes
Thank you! At the time, my wife couldn't figure out why I went over there to take the photo:-)