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LIMITED EDITION
Small in scale, big in meaning. These signed prints are limited, personal, and perfectly priced at $1,000. A thoughtful gift for collectors new and seasoned.
Available only this holiday season.
The Perfect Holiday Gift - Signed by the Artists Themselves
World-renowned photographers Paul Nicklen and Cristina Mittermeier have created something rare, personal, and giftable: hand-signed small prints, available this holiday season for just $1,000.
Whether it’s for a loved one, a future collector, or a treat for yourself, this is a chance to own a piece by two of the most celebrated environmental storytellers of our time.
✔ Hand-signed by the artists
✔ Limited quantities
NORTHERN PRIDE
Qaanaaq’s hardy population of sled dogs possesses an incomparable work ethic shaped by millennia in the harsh Arctic landscapes. Navigating the frozen sea ice comes as naturally to them as running and breathing, but their survival ultimately depends on the cohesion of the pack. Each team has a social hierarchy, and play is an integral part of establishing bonds, testing strength, and reaffirming trust.
Happy Feet
A baby emperor penguin basks in the sun on a crisp Antarctic evening. During the polar summer, the horizon never darkens and the Ross Sea surges to life. Penguins dive for fish, leopard seals patrol the ice floes, and whales feast on the brief abundance of krill drawn to the algae growing beneath the sea ice. For a small chick like this one, however, life is spent above the surface, waiting for the return of its parents from the hunt below.
I want to nap
Signed Print A lion cub sprawls on a sun-warmed kopje, surrounded by the soft, steady breaths of its sleeping siblings. Although life on the Namiri Plains of the Serengeti is far from easy, fraught with predators like hyenas and the ever-present threat of rival males, the cubs in this image thrive under the protection of their pride. Mothers, aunts, and sisters all band together to raise and defend the youngest cubs, while the males and fathers vigilantly guard the borders of their vast territories.
one fish, two fish
The moss-draped rivers threading through the Great Bear Rainforest are patrolled by all manner of wildlife: coastal wolves, eagles, otters, and bears. Yet perhaps the most unique inhabitant wandering beneath the ancient cedar and pine is the elusive spirit bear. Known also as Kermode bears, they have endured through the careful guardianship of First Nations communities, who have shielded their fragile numbers from hunting for generations. Their luminous white coats come from a recessive gene found in certain populations of black bears along the coast. Sightings are exceedingly rare, and seeing this one searching for salmon in the waters below felt like stumbling into a dream.
