Description
It’s So Chic Smoke Break, 1910 Deluxe Decoupage paper for furniture in sizes A0/A1/A2/A3, designed for the established or budding Furniture Artist. Exceptional quality & a vibrant showstopping image
Decoupage Paper For Furniture A0/A1/A2/A3 Smoke Break, 1910
Showstopping images with the most vivid colours printed in house using the very best Fine Art printers.
Available in 4 sizes, and custom sizes if required…get in touch to discuss.
A0 (1189mm x 841mm) A1 (841mm x 594mm) A2 (594mm x 420mm) A3 (420mm x 297mm)
Ideal for those that likes to use thicker decoupage papers as opposed to tissue papers etc. For a wrinkle free, crease free easier to manipulate medium these papers are fabulous to work with. This paper is also blue backed so doesn’t need a white painted background to apply it too, the colours remain bright and vivid.
There is a wide variety of decoupage paper for furniture designs available to suit everyone’s taste and needs.
I have a Facebook group for the decoupage papers where you will find application videos etc
https://www.facebook.com/groups/itssochicfurnitureart
Please tag me in your socials posts, I love to see your creations, please also share to ‘OUR’ group
There’s something haunting yet deeply human in the painting “Smoke Break, 1910.” Three boys huddle together in their work clothes—caps tilted, sleeves rolled, and faces dirtied by labour—sharing a smoke as though they’ve lived a hundred years. Set against the shadowy backdrop of an early industrial scene, their expressions balance somewhere between fatigue and defiance.
This evocative painting captures a moment suspended in time—a candid glimpse into youth shaped not by schoolyards and toys, but by factory soot and the weight of survival. It’s a stark reminder of the world children once inherited: long hours, little pay, and the illusion of adulthood bought with a cigarette.
More than just social commentary, this image is rich with storytelling. Each boy has his own tale etched in his stance, his eyes, the way he holds that cigarette—not as rebellion, but ritual. In showcasing their camaraderie and weariness, “Smoke Break, 1910” doesn’t glorify the past; it honours the children who endured it and challenges us to never forget.