Call of the Wild Mousepad by Michael van Kekem

Home Goods

You spend a lot of time on your computer and it’s important to have a mousepad that’s both dependable and great looking! Our mousepads for home, office and school give your workstation a touch of comfort and levity, plus they're easy to clean and stain-resistant! Thick and sturdy, mouse pads are made from high density neoprene with a smooth fabric layer and printed in bold, bright colors. Every purchase gives back to great social causes!

Proceeds Support:
The Digital Public Library of America amplifies the value of libraries as Americans’ most trusted sources of shared knowledge. They do this by proactively collaborating with partners in the field to accelerate innovative tools and ideas that empower and equip libraries to broaden digital access to information. Recovering The Classics is a crowdsourced collection of original book covers for some of the greatest works in the public domain, where anyone can contribute.

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Design By: Michael van Kekem
Michael van Kekem

Michael van Kekem works as a illustrative designer and printmaker, based in the Netherlands. His work consists out of posters, books, Very Manly Pins, prints and editorial illustrations. Together with two fellow illustrators he runs Studio M, an illustrative collective. With Studio M, he translates all sorts of stories into images: illustrations, identities or animations. www.michaelvankekem.com

 

Design By: Michael van Kekem
Michael van Kekem

Michael van Kekem works as a illustrative designer and printmaker, based in the Netherlands. His work consists out of posters, books, Very Manly Pins, prints and editorial illustrations. Together with two fellow illustrators he runs Studio M, an illustrative collective. With Studio M, he translates all sorts of stories into images: illustrations, identities or animations. www.michaelvankekem.com

 

Artist Statement

My version of the cover for Jack London's Call of the Wild was meant to be a basic feel of cold, mountains, and screams or howls if you will. Typography and a basic look sometimes say more than images. — Michael van Kekem