§ 01 Product. Benjamin · Framed poster · 81,00 USD
AK · 03 · Benjamin 01 / 04 Benjamin · benjamin_ak-frame-001
AK · Nº 3 / 19 Benjamin · Yellowknife, Canadá

Benjamin.

Framed poster

This framed poster of Benjamin arrives with the frame included and ready to hang. Benjamin is an arctic wolf, a weather station technician in the Canadian Arctic. Silver puffer jacket, fine silver chain, a frontal look with no tension. Take it out of the box, put it on the wall, done. No hunting for a framer, no waiting for mounting, no choosing a molding.

Printing
All-over, vibrant and washableAOP DTG · sublimation
Production
Cut and sewn in 3–7 daysOn demand · no stock
Shipping
Worldwide with trackingUSA / Latvia
Warranty
Defective? We reprint itAt no extra cost
81,00 USD Tax included · white-label
Size · pick yours Size guide →
01
§ 02 The real species. Canis lupus arctos · Arctic wolf
Arctic wolf en su hábitat · Canis lupus arctos
The real species

Arctic wolf.

Canis lupus arctos

A route done well doesn't need you to explain it afterwards.

High Arctic tundra, exclusively north of the tree line: Queen Elizabeth Archipelago (Ellesmere, Axel Heiberg, Devon, Ellef Ringnes) in Canada and northern Greenland. A landscape of permanent permafrost without tree cover, with temperatures that swing between -50 °C in winter and 5-10 °C in the brief Arctic summer.

§ 03 The story behind the portrait. 3 min · 02 chapters
I
CAP · 01 / 02

A studio in Iqaluit

Benjamin's apartment in Iqaluit is a small studio he bought with his savings, in a government building with views of Frobisher Bay. He furnished it with what he needed and nothing more. A workbench by the window, where he repairs parts when he gets back from the stations. The parka on the hook by the door. Frozen char in the fridge. White sheets, gray towels. Heating fixed at seventeen degrees. Window open a crack even in winter, because Benjamin likes to feel the cold air while he sleeps.

The first time his pilot friend came to visit, she said: "It looks like a mountain hut." Benjamin took it as a compliment. The only shine in the whole space is a photo of his mother Siku with his uncle Thomas on the windowsill and a topographic map of the Queen Elizabeth archipelago on the wall. No color anywhere. Everything silver, gray, and white — like Benjamin himself.

When he comes back after two or three weeks on the remote station circuit, he needs nothing to have changed. Every single thing still exactly in its place. He's the kind of person for whom a space works when it has just the right things and nothing left over. If you hang a portrait in a space like that, it has to earn its spot. It can't be decoration just to fill a gap.

II
CAP · 02 / 02

What stays when you leave

Benjamin spends two thirds of the month away. He covers weather stations scattered across the Queen Elizabeth Islands by Twin Otter or snowmobile, calibrating sensors, downloading climate data, fixing antennas, and replacing batteries at minus forty. He eats dried caribou and bannock. He sleeps in prefab huts. He works in four- or five-hour blocks with no clock and no alarm.

When he gets back to his Iqaluit apartment, the first thing he does is check everything is still as he left it. His mother's photo with Thomas on the shelf. The map on the wall. The spare socks in the same drawer. The things that stay when you leave say a lot about what you consider important. A picture that's still there week after week, trip after trip, becomes as much a part of the place as the window or the hook on the door.

That's what a framed portrait does on a wall: it stays. No maintenance, no asking for attention, no changing.

§ 04 Technical specs. Category · pod
Material & composition
Papel mate calidad museo + marco enmarcadoMaterial weight: 189 g/m²
Production
Print provider: PrintfulProduction method: digital_printProduction time: 2–7 bus
Care & maintenance
Limpiar el cristal con paño seco o ligeramente húmedo. Evitar luz solar directa
Shipping & timing
Shipping category: framed_poster
§ 06 More of Benjamin. 08 objects · same author
§ 07 What people ask. 08 · about POD
  • Each product is made to order when you place your purchase. There is no pre-made stock or overproduction. A specialised production partner prints, cuts, and prepares it specifically for you.
  • Production normally takes 2-5 business days. Shipping adds 3 to 20 days depending on destination. Most orders arrive within 1-3 weeks total. Exact times depend on the production facility and your location.
  • Contact us at mail@yagopartal.com with your order number and clear photos of the damage (include packaging). We will review your case and offer a solution as soon as possible, either replacement or refund.
  • It includes an ayous wood frame (1.9 cm thick, from renewable forests), an Acrylite acrylic protective front, and hanging hardware. It is lightweight and arrives ready to hang directly on the wall.
  • Yes. You will receive an email with a tracking number when your order ships from production. If your order ships in multiple packages, you will get a separate tracking number for each one.
  • Yes, we ship worldwide. Shipping costs vary by region and product type. You can see the exact cost at checkout before confirming your order.
  • No. No animals participate in or are harmed during the process. The portraits are created combining photography, illustration, and artificial intelligence. They are fictional characters representing real species with respect and dignity.
  • Yes. We accept custom commissions of all kinds: pet portraits, corporate projects, and artistic collaborations. Visit the Custom Projects section in the footer for details and contact.