Lithographed art print titled "The Spell of Spring" by artist Harry Leith-Ross.

This print measures 16" x 20". 

It has been safely rolled inside a tube with end caps since 1985. First time it was removed was to photograph for this listing. 
I purchased this print and numerous other ones from an art print and poster manufacturer / supplier in 1985. 

I sold lots of these prints, some framed, others laminated on wood, among other presentation methods popular back in the time frame. 

Selling on eBay since 2010, I continue to find items in my inventory that are in excellent, unused condition, that have simply been stored away for many years. I will be listing many more prints in the near future. Please check back in my store often for additions, as well as the many other art and paper items that I currently have listed. I have aged into my late 60's, and have begun to downsize, so moving much of my inventory will be necessary. 

This print will be mailed to buyer in a 2" diameter ULINE mailing tube with plastic endcaps. It will be carefully returned to the tube since I had to remove it to take the attached photos. 

I always price my items to be the lowest price of any of the same items currently listed on eBay. Items are priced fairly, and shipping cost paid by buyer are just for the cost of mailing by the new USPS Ground Advantage mailing platform. No charges are added for my shipping containers, etc. 

I'll mail the print either the same day, or next day after payment is received. Thank you in advance for choosing to purchase any of my listed items on eBay. 

Following is a some info on this artist:

(1886 - 1973)
Harry "Tony" Leith-Ross was a British-American landscape painter and teacher. He taught at the art colonies in Woodstock, New York and Rockport, Maine, and later was part of the art colony in New Hope, Pennsylvania. A precise draftsman and a superb colorist, Leith-Ross is considered one of the Pennsylvania Impressionists. 
Leith-Ross was educated in England and Scotland, and studied engineering at the University of Birmingham for a year. He emigrated to the United States at age 17 in 1903, and worked for his uncle's coal company. He subsequently took up advertising work in Denver, Colorado. He travelled to Paris in 1909, and studied art at the Académie Delécluse and the Académie Julian. He studied in New York City at the National Academy of Design School under Charles Yardley Turner, beginning in 1910.
The Art Students League of New York operated a summer painting school in Woodstock, New York, which Leith-Ross first attended in 1913. His instructors included Birge Harrison and John F. Carlson. It was there that he met fellow student John Fulton Folinsbee, who would become his life-long friend. Folinsbee had contracted polio as a child, and was confined to a wheelchair. The two men shared a cabin, and Leith-Ross would carry Folinsbee around the countryside on his back. Each served as best man for the other's wedding. Folinsbee married in 1914, and he and his wife settled in New Hope, Pennsylvania in 1916, where Leith-Ross was a frequent houseguest. Both men painted en plein air, directly from nature. They were famous for spending afternoons sketching on the bridge at New Hope (and for tossing anything that displeased them into the Delaware River).
Leith-Ross served as a second lieutenant in the United States Army during World War I.
After the war, Leith-Ross taught at the University of Buffalo, and co-founded an art school in Rockport, Maine, where he taught during the summers. He met student Emily Slaymaker in Summer 1925, and they were married later that year. They lived in Woodstock, New York for a decade, then settled outside New Hope, Pennsylvania in 1935. 
He wrote a well-regarded book on landscape painting: Leith-Ross, Harry (1956). The Landscape Painter's Manual.