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Lobster Landing Lobster Pound Shack Restaurant

Lobster Landing – Seafood lovers of New England will relish this fine art photograph of a classic lobster pound in the harbor of Clinton, Connecticut along Long Island Sound.

100s of framing options!
Your choice of frame and mat or purchase as a canvas print or paper print.

The beautiful sky colors of the setting sun play off the cluttered and rustic exterior of this local fixture. This 100-year-old, weathered shack at the end of Clinton’s Commerce Street is storybook-adorable, right down to the delightfully askew letter on its red-and-white sign.

Lobster Landing in Clinton Connnecticut
Lobster Landing in Clinton Connecticut – available as a print, framed and matted, canvas, metal, wood and acrylic prints.

Get your print of this classic New England seafood joint here: https://edward-fielding.pixels.com/featured/lobster-landing-sunset-edward-fielding.html

The lobster rolls are naturally the centerpiece of Lobster Landing’s business, using a simple recipe with attention to detail and quality. Each roll gets an exact quarter-pound of shellfish, a blend of freshly cooked and hand-picked knuckle, claw and tail meat that is weighed and wrapped into small mesh bags. The meat is nestled into a grinder roll, quickly toasted on a grill, and the sandwich is finished with a small ladle of butter melted over a double-boiler and a squeeze of fresh lemon.

Even More Lobster Art!

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Get your fill of great fine art lobster, seafood and fishing photography with the portfolio of fine art photographer Edward M. Fielding.  Fielding has traveled the coast of North America from Florida to Prince Edward Island looking for great images of the fishing industry, lobstering and of course fine eats.

More Lobster related artwork – https://edward-fielding.pixels.com/art/lobster

Lobsters comprise a family (Nephropidae, sometimes also Homaridae) of large marine crustaceans.

Lobsters have long bodies with muscular tails, and live in crevices or burrows on the sea floor. Three of their five pairs of legs have claws, including the first pair, which are usually much larger than the others. Highly prized as seafood, lobsters are economically important, and are often one of the most profitable commodities in coastal areas they populate.