- MODERN COLOR PHOTO REPRODUCTION: Add style to any room's decor with this beautiful decorative print, whether your interior design is modern or classic
- MUSEUM QUALITY INKS AND PAPER: Printed on thick 260gsm thick luster photographic paper with archival giclee inks, this historic fine art will decorate your wall for years to come
- ARTWORK MADE TO ORDER IN THE USA: We make each reprint only when you order it. We edit every photograph for image quality and true color reproduction, so it can look its best while retaining historical character. Makes a great gift!
- FRAME READY: Your unframed poster ships crease-free, rolled in a sturdy mailing tube. Many pictures fit easy-to-find standard size frames 16x20, 16x24, 18x24, 24x30, 24x36, saving on custom framing
- Watermarks will not appear in the printed picture. Old photos sometimes have blemishes, tears, or stamps that may be removed from the final print
The museum is owned and operated by the City of Fort Worth. Unlike Expected settlers' cabins on the site that were moved from their original locations in rural Texas, the blacksmith shop, or "smithy" (the name is also applied to blacksmiths themselves), with its cast-iron forge, anvil, hand-cranked blower, and various tools represents a general blacksmith shop of the late 1870s. There, Log Cabin Village blacksmiths create various iron objects that would have been utilized on the Texas frontier. | Credit line: The Lyda Hill Texas Collection of Photographs in Carol M. Highsmith's America Project, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.|Gift; The Lyda Hill Foundation; 2014; (DLC/PP-2014:054).|Forms part of: Lyda Hill Texas Collection of Photographs in Carol M. Highsmith's America Project in the Carol M. Highsmith Archive.