If you love Board Games, you're in the right place!

Reconnect with loved ones and create lasting memories—grab a board game today for endless family fun!

Discover one of the largest online stores for board games: 5,500+ titles in stock!

4D Cityscape  |  SKU: 4D10005

Puzzle - 4D Cityscape - Stephen Wilkes Stonehenge, U.K. Day to Night (1000 Pieces)

$23.95 CAD
This item is available for pre-order. Orders will be fulfilled in order received. We will contact you if the item is unavailable.

Delivery and Shipping

For more details, please refer to our Shipping and Order Information.


Description

Photographer Stephen Wilkes is one of America's most iconic photographers, widely recognized for his fine art, editorial and commercial work. Day to Night, Wilkes's most defining project, began in 2009. These epic cityscapes and landscapes portrayed from a fixed camera angle for up to 30 hours capture fleeting moments of humanity as light passes in front of his lens over the course of a full day. A select group of these images are then seamlessly blended into one photograph, capturing the changing of time within a single frame.

“I like to describe myself as a collector of magical moments,” he has explained.  “My work is a combination of art & science.  I’m exploring the space time continuum within a 2 dimensional still photograph.  Time is something we’ve never been able to put our minds around, yet in a unique way these images begin to put a face on time.”

Stephen Wilkes has teamed up with 4D Brands International to launch a full puzzle collection of the Day to Night Series. With over forty epic images to come, you can expect to experience all the famous and historic places that Stephen has captured throughout his decade long project.

"Stonehenge is one of the best-known ancient wonders of the world, and one of England’s most iconic prehistoric monuments. I photographed this Day to Night™, just a few weeks after the summer solstice. The inner ring of Stonehenge has been closed to the public since 1978 and opens only a few times a year, hosting a pagan wedding ceremony called 'handfasting'. As luck would happen, I was blessed to capture a wedding ceremony on the very day I made this photograph."