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Diner Nocturne Gold

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Premium Quality
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The Gods Stopped In for Coffee

Anubis and Horus on diner stools, a hieroglyph menu overhead, the city dark past the window. Gold light, surreal mood, ancient gods meeting late-night America in one frame.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Why it works

Art sets the tone for a room. The right piece gives the space a center and changes how it feels the moment you walk in.

Built to last

Stretched over a solid pinewood frame and printed on heavy canvas that won't sag or fade. The wood is FSC-certified from responsibly managed forests.

Print quality

Archival inks hold their color for years. Every canvas is inspected by hand before it leaves the facility, so what you hang is what you saw.

Ordered with confidence

It arrives ready to hang with the hardware already on. If it isn't right, our return policy has you covered.

SHIPPING INFO

Printed on demand at the production partner nearest you (6 US locations, plus Canada, Italy, and Australia), so it travels the shortest distance possible to your door.

Delivery timeframe
United States7 to 14 business days
Canada & Europe8 to 14 business days
Rest of the world12 to 18 business days

Timeframes cover production plus transit. You'll get tracking by email as soon as it ships.

Full shipping details
SIZING OPTIONS
Depth
Canvas WrapGallery depth, 1.25 inch, no frame
Black Floating Frame1.5 inch solid wood, arrives ready to hang
Sizes
SizeInchesCentimeters
Small12 × 16 in30 × 41 cm
Medium18 × 24 in46 × 61 cm
Large24 × 30 in61 × 76 cm
Huge30 × 40 in76 × 102 cm
Massive40 × 60 in102 × 152 cm

Dimensions list the shorter side first. Choose your exact size in the options above.

Add the Black Floating Frame and the finished piece grows about 1.25 inches on every side.

Last Call for the Old Gods

Picture this. Anubis and Horus have pulled up stools at an all-night diner, and a woman in a blue headdress sits between them. The menu board overhead is written in hieroglyphs. Outside the glass the street runs cold and dark, but inside it's all amber light, gold tones, and the low hum of a counter that never quite closes. The illustration carries real weight, with clean lines holding the whole surreal scene steady.

It reads loudest in a room that already leans moody: a home bar, a lounge, a man cave with the lights kept low. The black and gold palette plays well against dark walls and warm wood, and the Egyptian mythology angle gives people something to sit with long after the first look.

Pairs well with Black and Gold Wall Art, Fantasy Paintings and Egyptian Artwork.


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