|
Home
Railroad
Collectibles-All
Railroad
Magazines
RR
Books
Collectible Plates
Information & shopping cart
New
Collector Plate website
Collectible plates LIST only - no photos
Transportation Items Air, Bus paper
Hess Trucks & Ertl die cast items
Books & Magazines
(Non Railroad)
Great Items
- Cottages, Cigarette posters
| |
| Go back to: Catalog> List of Products |
| View Cart |
|

|
 CW Dawns Golden Warmth
|
|
A Country Wonderland Collection, "Dawn's Golden Warmth" by Wilhelm J. Goebel.
|
$35.00
|
| A Country Wonderland Collection, "Dawn's Golden Warmth" by Wilhelm J. Goebel.
|
|
|
|
A Country Wonderland Collection, "Dawn's Golden Warmth" by Wilhelm J. Goebel. Sixth issue in this series. Bradford Exchange, 1996. Plate size approx 8.5 by 6.0 inches. Suggested Retail $50.00.
Dawn finds the cardinals perched on a huge, snow-laden spruce tree across from the old red mill. Water thunders into the reservoir before them, its motion keeping the water from freezing solid on this frigid winter morning.
Something about the sound of the water seems to stimulate the beautiful scarlet birds to sing, and their warbling whistles soon fill the air. The cold doesn't bother the cardinals a bit. Their thick feathers are lined with warm down, and the ridged padding on the undersides of their feet lets them get a firm grip on the icy branches.
Snow casts a thick white cover over the forests and hills beyond the mill, and it's easy to see that spring will not come soon. But the warm morning sun brings a bright sparkle to the water and the snow, filling the scene with cheer.
Finding food is really the cardinals' only problem, but with the local folks providing feeders full of sunflower seeds and the trees filled with buds and seeds, this hardy pair manages very well.
Wilhelm J. Goebel brings you the bright beauty of cardinals in the countryside for the final time. Your lovely collection is complete!
• The creation of the fine collector's plate you have just acquired and whose authenticity is certified by this document is the result of work by an international cadre of skilled artisans. After the plate art was created in the United States, a fine ceramic transfer, incorporating pigments carefully chosen to faithfully re-create the vibrant beauty of the artist's original, was created in France and Germany and permanently fired into the fine Japanese porcelain plate body at more than 1,4600 Fahrenheit by talented craftsmen and craftswomen in the United States.
|
|
| |
|