“Words are pale shadows of forgotten names. As names have power, words have power. Words can light fires in the minds of men. Words can wring tears from the hardest hearts.”
Auri and the Moon Art Print
- Regular price
- $30.00
- $30.00
- Regular price
- Saving $-30.00
- Unit price
- per
Auri and the Moon Art Print
- Regular price
- $30.00
- $30.00
- Regular price
- Saving $-30.00
- Unit price
- per
Originally printed in Patrick Rothfuss's novella The Slow Regard of Silent Things, we are pleased to offer this print of Nate Taylor's gorgeous art for your walls! This print comes with the option to be signed by the artist Nate Taylor.
We have expanded our art print selections! We are now offering our art print selections on acid-free Archival Matte paper for a high contrast, high resolution display! Our original premium 250 gsm Satin Photo paper that presents a soft, gentle luster and radiant gloss is still available as well. Choose either medium in 11" x 17".
All art print options are now printed in-house to order. Please allow 1-2 extra business days for our prints to fully dry and set before we ship. Signed prints will take longer, please allow extra time for any signed prints to ship. All prints are mailed rolled within a clear art sleeve and shipped in a durable cardboard mailing tube.
Find more officially licensed merchandise in our Kingkiller Chronicle collection.
All proceeds go to Worldbuilders, a geek-centered nonprofit supporting humanitarian efforts worldwide.
- description
- Details
- Creator Bio
Originally printed in Patrick Rothfuss's novella The Slow Regard of Silent Things, we are pleased to offer this print of Nate Taylor's gorgeous art for your walls! This print comes with the option to be signed by the artist Nate Taylor.
We have expanded our art print selections! We are now offering our art print selections on acid-free Archival Matte paper for a high contrast, high resolution display! Our original premium 250 gsm Satin Photo paper that presents a soft, gentle luster and radiant gloss is still available as well. Choose either medium in 11" x 17".
All art print options are now printed in-house to order. Please allow 1-2 extra business days for our prints to fully dry and set before we ship. Signed prints will take longer, please allow extra time for any signed prints to ship. All prints are mailed rolled within a clear art sleeve and shipped in a durable cardboard mailing tube.
Find more officially licensed merchandise in our Kingkiller Chronicle collection.
All proceeds go to Worldbuilders, a geek-centered nonprofit supporting humanitarian efforts worldwide.
Sized 11" x 17" and printed on 240g satin finish photo paper, this art print is signed by Nate Taylor. All art prints are wrapped in plastic sleeves and shipped in a protective cardboard tube.
Nate Taylor is a freelance artist living with his family in the Pacific Northwest. Inspired at an early age by newspaper comics and movie poster art, he has been an artist all his life with work ranging from portraits and illustrations to cartoons and comics. When he isn’t working, Nate enjoys roleplaying games and carpentry.
A love of tabletop games and science fiction and fantasy stories has guided Nate’s career. He has illustrated “The Slow Regard of Silent Things” and “The Adventures of the Princess & Mr. Whiffle” by Patrick Rothfuss, “Sometimes the Magic Works” by Terry Brooks, book covers for “Whatever” collections by John Scalzi, and contributed artwork to “Unfettered: Tales by Masters of Fantasy,” “The Undone Life of Jak Dreadth,” and “The Tempered Steel of Antiquity Grey” by Shawn Speakman.
Nate has also created art for tabletop games “Button Men,” “Tak,” “Pairs,” “Lords of Vegas: Underworld,” “Lords of Vegas: Americana,” and “The Island of Doctor Lucky.” He is currently developing several comic and graphic novel projects.
See more of Nate Taylor's work on his website.
Patrick Rothfuss was born in Madison, Wisconsin to awesome parents. After nine years at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, he accidentally had enough credits to graduate with an English degree. Patrick then went to grad school. He’d rather not talk about it. In March 2007, The Name of the Wind was published and met with surprising success. In the years since, it has been translated into 30 languages, won all manner of awards, and become a bestseller in several countries. After a great deal of work and a few raised eyebrows from his patient editor, Wise Man’s Fear came out in March 2011, immediately hitting #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list. When not working on the third book of the series, Pat plays with his kiddos, makes mead, and runs Worldbuilders, a geek-centered charity that has raised more than a million dollars for Heifer International. For more information about Patrick Rothfuss, check out his blog.