All prints are made-to-order and will require one to two weeks’ production time before being shipped. Each order will be acknowledged after payment has been received to confirm the shipping date. To customers who order prints of the same image subsequent to their original order, there may be slight variations in image density and/or contrast when compared to the initial print. If exact matching prints are desired, these should be ordered at the same time.
All prints are shipped flat, durably mounted on high quality backing board with two inch borders top and sides and a five inch border at bottom.
Custom Matting and Framing crafted to fit the Mount Board Size shown will be required to complete the presentation. The bottom border will show below the lower right corner of the image the photographer’s signature. Due to slight size variations please await receipt of your mounted print before ordering custom matting and framing from your local vendor.
Reproduction or publishing of prints sold on this website and related websites in whole or in part in any form, photographically, digitally, or otherwise, is strictly prohibited. The purchase of a print on this website is intended for buyer’s exclusive use in a single display location, and buyer accepts these conditions without modification. Please see Terms and Conditions of Sale for further clarification and additional terms and conditions for the sale of prints.
Purdue University Recitation Building and University Hall, West Lafayette, Indiana 1969
Two of Purdue University’s oldest structures, the ivy-covered Recitation Building and University Hall in the distance lie on the quadrangle at campus center, not far from John Purdue’s grave. It was John Purdue, a wealthy Lafayette, Indiana, industrialist, who gave the land for the university and became its eponymous benefactor. University Hall, the oldest building on campus, with its steeple, French neo-classic mansard roof and red brick facade, stands apart architecturally from newer, more simply designed structures on campus–except for one unifying element. Almost all academic buildings retain the use of red brick, unifying this massive university in the cornfields of northwest Indiana.
Photograph made on Kodak 4×5 Ektachrome film with a Calumet View Camera using a 150mm f5.6 Schneider Symmar lens. A high resolution digital scan of the original transparency yields prints of exceptional quality and sharpness.
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The logo is a security watermark and will not appear in your print.

