Silhouette Samurai Sunset Glass Wall Art
A samurai-at-the-blood-moon stands in horizontal cinematic format — a stoic ronin in a wide conical hat, flowing dark robe and sheathed katana stands in a marshy reflecting-pool of crimson water, framed by a giant orange-amber blood-moon over silhouetted hills and bare-branch trees against a deep scarlet sky.
The composition reads as graphic-pop samurai-poster: the ronin is rendered as pure black silhouette with a few red highlights, the blood-moon dominates the upper third like a celestial spotlight, and the rippling crimson water-reflection extends his stillness into the lower half. The piece sits between Akira-Kurosawa film-poster canon and contemporary graphic-novel illustration.
Tempered glass deepens the scarlet sky and pushes the amber blood-moon into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer cigar lounge, a martial-arts dojo, a masculine-luxe study or a film-screening room, this samurai-blood-moon cinematography brings Bushido drama and graphic-novel sophistication into a residential wall.
Original: $159.90
-65%$159.90
$55.96








Description
A samurai-at-the-blood-moon stands in horizontal cinematic format — a stoic ronin in a wide conical hat, flowing dark robe and sheathed katana stands in a marshy reflecting-pool of crimson water, framed by a giant orange-amber blood-moon over silhouetted hills and bare-branch trees against a deep scarlet sky.
The composition reads as graphic-pop samurai-poster: the ronin is rendered as pure black silhouette with a few red highlights, the blood-moon dominates the upper third like a celestial spotlight, and the rippling crimson water-reflection extends his stillness into the lower half. The piece sits between Akira-Kurosawa film-poster canon and contemporary graphic-novel illustration.
Tempered glass deepens the scarlet sky and pushes the amber blood-moon into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer cigar lounge, a martial-arts dojo, a masculine-luxe study or a film-screening room, this samurai-blood-moon cinematography brings Bushido drama and graphic-novel sophistication into a residential wall.
























