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Winter Woolies Mug

Winter Woolies Mug

£8.23

Fine bone china mug featuring "Winter Woolies" by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe. Made in England by Royal Grafton.
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Time To Put Ewe'r Feet Up Mug

Time To Put Ewe'r Feet Up Mug

£8.23

Porcelain mug featuring "Time To Put Ewe'r Feet Up " by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe.
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Thomas Joseph Box Calendar 2011

Thomas Joseph Box Calendar 2011

£6.11

Clear plastic box calendar containing 12 of Thomas's famous whimsical sheep prints each with a calendar on the front and planner on the back. The featured pictures are: Global Warming, Cool Dude, Ewe're A Jolly Good Fellow, Who's A Baad Girl, Ewe Wanna' Know A Secret, Ewe're A Big Softee, Jenson Mutton, Ewe Livin' The High Life, We Love Ewe - Silly Moo, The "U" Factor, Ewe're A Star and Silent Night .

4.7"(120mm) wide and 5.4"(138mm) tall
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The Twelve Days of Christmas 500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle

The Twelve Days of Christmas 500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle

£9.75

500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle: Approx. size when completed: 19" (480mm) wide, 14.5" (365mm) tall

A stunning interpretation of the classic Christmas song in Rachel’s inimitable style. It was illegal to be a Catholic in England from 1558 to 1829, so this was written as a catechism song to help young Catholics learn the basics of their faith. Since it sounded like rhyming nonsense, Catholics could sing it without fear of imprisonment. The song had hidden meanings; "true love" refers to God and "me" refers to the church. The twelve gifts also had their meanings. On the twelfth day of Christmas my true love sent to me twelve drummers drumming (the twelve points of doctrine in the Apostles’ Creed), eleven pipers piping (the eleven faithful apostles), ten lords a-leaping (the ten commandments), nine ladies dancing (the nine fruits of the Spirit), eight maids a-milking (the eight beatitudes), seven swans a-swimming (the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, the seven sacraments), six geese a-laying (the six days of creation), five golden rings (the first five books of the Old Testament, the "Pentateuch"), four calling birds (the four Gospels, the four evangelists), three French hens (faith, hope and charity), two turtle doves (the Old and New Testaments) and a partridge in a pear tree (Jesus Christ, symbolically presented as a mother partridge that acts as a decoy to save her helpless chicks from predators).
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Family Album Coaster

Family Album Coaster

£2.06

Individual coaster featuring Family Album
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Nag Nag Nag Coaster

Nag Nag Nag Coaster

£2.06

Individual cork backed coaster featuring Nag Nag Nag
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Double Ewe Double Ewe Double Ewe Dot Coaster

Double Ewe Double Ewe Double Ewe Dot Coaster

£2.06

Individual coaster featuring Double Ewe Double Ewe Double Ewe Dot
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Ewe Are My Sunshine Coaster

Ewe Are My Sunshine Coaster

£2.06

Individual coaster featuring Ewe Are My Sunshine
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Green Man 1000 piece Jigsaw Puzzle

Green Man 1000 piece Jigsaw Puzzle

£13.51

1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle: Approx. size when completed: 26.25" (655mm) wide, 19.75" (500mm) tall

The Green Man is a motif found in many cultures around the world. The representation of a face surrounded by or made of leaves; it is interpreted primarily as a symbol of rebirth, representing the cycle of growth each spring. Perhaps a fertility God, the beneficent spirit of vegetation or a tree spirit, the Green Man motif was still being built into European churches even after 1000 years of Christianity. Here the artist has depicted the Green Man as the centre of the life cycle of the Oak tree. Oak was a sacred tree for the Celts, thought to have special powers and to serve as the abode of the fairies. In reality the oak tree supports more insect, bird and animal life than any other. The Dagda, the powerful God of Celtic tradition, is likened to the oak, never failing to give hospitality to all who asked for it.
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We're Daft But We Love Ewe Mug

We're Daft But We Love Ewe Mug

£8.23

Porcelain mug featuring "We're Daft But We Love Ewe" by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe.
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Baaad Girls Mug

Baaad Girls Mug

£8.23

Porcelain mug featuring "Baaad Girls" by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe.
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Are Ewe The Boss? Mug

Are Ewe The Boss? Mug

£8.23

Porcelain mug featuring "Are Ewe The Boss?" by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe.
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Form-ewe-la One Mug

Form-ewe-la One Mug

£8.23

Porcelain mug featuring "Form-ewe-la One" by Northern Ireland artist Thomas Joseph. Dishwasher and microwave safe.
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St Brendan The Navigator Jigsaw Puzzle

St Brendan The Navigator Jigsaw Puzzle

£13.51

1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle Approx. size when completed: 26.25" (655mm) tall, 19.75" (500mm) wide

St. Brendan was born in 486 AD and founded a monastery at Clonfert, County Galway. Brendan travelled widely; he was said to have set sail with a handful of monks on a perilous seven-year quest across the Atlantic in a boat of wood and oxhide. En route, legend tells us that they were raised up on the backs of "sea monsters" (whales), they passed by "crystal columns that rose up to the sky" (icebergs) and they were pelted with "flaming, foul-smelling rocks" (from a volcano). Eventually, the intrepid voyagers arrived at a beautiful land they called the "Promised Land of the Saints", an island which became a standard feature on maps for the next millennium. It is widely believed that St. Brendan the Navigator and his monks had in fact arrived in America almost 1,000 years before Christopher Colombus.
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Eejits

Eejits

Carpet Page 1000 piece Jigsaw Puzzle

Carpet Page 1000 piece Jigsaw Puzzle

£13.51

1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle: Approx. size when completed: 26.25" (655mm) wide, 19.75" (500mm) tall

A carpet page is a page of pure ornament, looking rather like an oriental carpet, with brilliant colours, active lines and complex patterns. They are commonly found in books in the Insular style, that is, the illuminated Celtic manuscripts produced in Irish and British monasteries from 600 to 900 AD. It has been suggested that the complexity of the ornamentation in carpet pages was believed to confuse evil spirits, thus keeping safe the sacred information contained in the chapters to follow. Some art historians have found ties between Insular carpet pages, Middle Eastern decorative text pages and oriental carpets. In this carpet page by Rachel Arbuckle, the artist has combined the geometric, angular lines of Moorish art with the softer curves and intricate interlacing of the Celts. The central structure of the design is a cross shape which is often found in Insular carpet pages, except in this case the artist has altered the proportions to suggest the four gates of the Tibetan mandala. Dogs, which are used as ornamentation throughout the design, feature extensively in Insular art and appear to have been adapted by Irish and Scottish monastic artists from a style of animal pattern which was found in Germanic art at the time. The result is a contemporary Celtic design which draws on an eclectic mix of styles and cultures, reflecting the possible influences from more exotic climes in Insular art.
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Highland Showdown

Highland Showdown

Courting Peacocks 500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle

Courting Peacocks 500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle

£9.75

500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle: Approx. size when completed: 19" (480mm) wide, 14.5" (365mm) tall

The image of the peacock can be found in many cultures and traditions. The early Celts looked to the beasts of the earth, sky and sea in an attempt to understand life and believed animals taught them how to live in harmony with Nature itself. The peacock appeared as a symbol of beauty, paradise, rebirth, pride and the incorruptibility of the soul. It also tells the story of the heavens and the rays of the sun. As legend had it, the peacock’s flesh did not putrefy, so the Celts considered it a symbol of the Resurrection and everlasting life. Hence, it is widely used throughout early Christian Celtic manuscripts as a representation of Christ.
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Form-ewe-la One

Form-ewe-la One

Silly Ass

Silly Ass

Internet access to Irish and Celtic Crafts and Gifts.

Jim Fitzpatrick Cards

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Nuada The Sun God

Nuada The Sun God

Ref: JF01


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Nuada was king of the Tuatha Dé Danann and later in Celtic times was regarded as a solar deity.

Aille The Fair

Aille The Fair

Ref: JF01N


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)


The Tuatha Dé assemble

The Tuatha Dé assemble

Ref: JF02


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The Tuatha Dé Danann assemble under their king Nuada of the Silver arm before the second great battle of Moytura fought in Ireland in pre-Celtic times.

Lough Derravaragh: the Children of Lir. 1990 (detail)

Lough Derravaragh: the Children of Lir. 1990 (detail)

Ref: JF03


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The children of Lir were turned into swans by the sorcery of their jealous stepmother and were serenaded by the Milesians during their exile on Lough Derravaragh

The Coming of the Tuatha Dé Danann. 1978

The Coming of the Tuatha Dé Danann. 1978

Ref: JF04


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Sailing the "high air and the low air" the mystical Tuatha Dé Danann invaded Ireland and defeated the Fir Bolfg, Fir Domhnann and Gaileoin in the first battle of Moytura.

Tailltu. Queen of the Great Games

Tailltu. Queen of the Great Games

Ref: JF04N


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)


Peace on Earth 1987

Peace on Earth 1987

Ref: JF05


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

A work influenced by the monastic manuscript art of ancient Ireland with an old message still relevant in more modern times

Midir and Étain: The Fichel Game

Midir and Étain: The Fichel Game

Ref: JF09


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Midir plays Echu Airen, King of Tara, in a fichel game (a chess type board game) to reclaim the beautiful Étain as his wife once more.

Cú Chulainn of Muirthemne 1990

Cú Chulainn of Muirthemne 1990

Ref: JF51


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Cú Chulainn (The Hound of Culann) is the greatest hero of the Ulster cycle of Irish Mythology. Cú Chulainn's war prowess is prodigious, he is larger than life and the epic "Táin" is full of his incredible deeds of battle.

The Children of Lir: The Lakeside. 1989.

The Children of Lir: The Lakeside. 1989.

Ref: JF52


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The four children of Lir, king of the legendary Tuatha Dé Danann, were turned into swans by the sorcery of their jealous stepmother and condemned to roam the lakes and seas for 900 years.

Diarmuid and Gráinne

Diarmuid and Gráinne

Ref: JF53


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The elopement of Diarmuid and Gráinne is one of the great romances of the Fenian cycle.

Midir and Étain

Midir and Étain

Ref: JF54


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Reborn 1000 years after her birth Étain was tracked down by her lover Midir and reclaimed as his wife once more.

Twilight of the Gods

Twilight of the Gods

Ref: JF55


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Fergus Mac Ríoch, lover of Queen Medb (Maeve) summons up the gods and heroes of ancient Ireland for one last epic battle.

Boann

Boann

Ref: JF56


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The River-Goddess of the Boyne valley and consort of the Dagda, the father of the Gods of the mystical Tuatha Dé Danann and the God of abundance. Their mating-place and dwelling was Brú Na Bóinne, now called Newgrange.

Saint Patrick Banishes the Serpents

Saint Patrick Banishes the Serpents

Ref: JF57


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

According to legend the snakes and serpents were banished from Ireland by Saint Patrick, the founder of Roman Christianity in Ireland. The Copts and other Christian missionaries were here before him but he was the most influential of them all.

Saint Finnian. 1998

Saint Finnian. 1998

Ref: JF58


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Saint Finnian, or Fintan, was the legendary Christian priest to whom Tuan told the story of Ireland from earliest times and who recorded his story of the first tribes to invade Ireland and conquer it.

The Greek Princess. 1993

The Greek Princess. 1993

Ref: JF59


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

The Greek Princess is the title of one of the stories collected by the poet W.B. Yeats in his "Irish Folk and FairyTales"

Cruitne, Daughter of Lochan

Cruitne, Daughter of Lochan

Ref: JF60


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Cruitne, lover of the hero Finn Mac Cumhail, gave her name to the Cruitnic race who inhabited Ireland in pre-celtic times.

Twelve Wild Geese. 1990

Twelve Wild Geese. 1990

Ref: JF101


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

Twelve Wild Geese is the title of one of the stories collected by the poet W.B. Yeats in his book "Irish Folk and Fairy Tales". 6" x 6" (55mmx55mm) approx.

RedBeardPullers 1994

RedBeardPullers 1994

Ref: JF102


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

A whimsical piece of Celtic abstraction by the artist. First of a series of 25 for a projected book "Celtic Illuminations". 6" x 6" (55mmx55mm) approx.

RedBeardPullers 1996

RedBeardPullers 1996

Ref: JF104


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)

A whimsical piece of Celtic abstraction by the artist. First of an ongoing series for a projected book "Celtic Illuminations". 6" x 6" (55mmx55mm) approx.

The Battle of Moira

The Battle of Moira

Ref: JK-GC105


Price: £2.20 (Excluding VAT at 17.5%)


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