The colours of the resulting print may not always match the colours on your screen.
Asakusa Rice Fields and Festival of Torinomachi from the Series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, 1857
Hiroshige Utagawa, also called Hiroshige Andō (1797–1858), was a famous 19th century Japanese painter and printmaker whose works in the ukiyo-e style had a strong influence on European landscape painting. Ukiyo-e means 'paintings of ongoing, ephemeral life'. His woodcuts usually have simple motifs such as Japanese cities, bridges and mountains. But he also painted genre scenes: actors and geisha in their surroundings, theatre scenes, markets, and everyday life at various stations.