Toft Monks Mill framed through bare winter trees, the Broads landscape stretching flat beyond

IM-0003 · Paul Kemp, Millwright

PR-0002

The mill through winter trees

Postcard

The smallest object the archive makes. Posted to a friend who would recognise the subject, pinned to a noticeboard, slipped into a thank-you note, kept in a desk drawer for the days when the work needs a small physical reminder. The pack of six lets one frame travel through six lives at once.

Paper for this tier

Premium A6 card stock

Heavy art-quality card. The postcard is itself a small print object - signed, dated, archive-coded.

Open Edition

The print that goes on a wall and stays there. A4 fits anywhere; A3 reads across a room. Archival paper, signed and dated, not numbered - the point is daily presence, not collecting. Most of the archive's prints in private homes are this tier.

Paper for this tier

Hahnemühle Photo Rag (matte cotton, 308gsm)

The world's most widely used fine-art photographic paper. Soft, lightly textured, deep blacks, neutral whitepoint. The default across the archive - roughly 90% of frames print on this. The same paper Mash sends to every documented subject as their gift print.

Collector Edition

Deckle White mount Certificate

The print as an object. Twenty-five will exist; once the twenty-fifth is sold, the edition closes for good. The kind of print given as a milestone gift, hung in a considered space, and passed on. The ArtSure Certificate of Authenticity is the paper trail collectors, galleries, and future auction houses expect.

Same Hahnemühle Photo Rag as the Open Edition. The differentiation here is the object: deckle edges on all four sides, window mount, ArtSure certificate, and a numbered edition.

Museum Edition is reserved for hero frames and is not offered on this print. Browse the shop directory to see which prints carry the Museum tier.

Card details are entered on Stripe’s secure pages, not here. Shipping address is collected at checkout.

About this print

Toft Monks Mill framed through bare winter branches, the flat Broads landscape stretching beyond. You see the mill long before you arrive - there is nothing else on the horizon to compete with it. The frame reads as both arrival and inevitability: the trees thinning, the tower waiting at the end of the line of sight.

Leica Q3. The subject of the photograph is, in a sense, the absence of anything else - the mill stands alone because the landscape has been engineered to put it there.