Handsome Provisions is a carefully curated print shop from the team behind one of illustration's most celebrated agencies. And it's the perfect place to find art that will genuinely transform your walls.
Yellow Portrait by Agathe Singer
Since 2010, Handsome Frank has represented some of the world's most talented illustrators and artists. Their new venture, Handsome Provisions, puts that extraordinary roster front and centre, offering archival-quality giclée prints hand-checked, packaged and posted by their London team. We've picked five of the prints to spotlight, along with the remarkable artists behind them.
There's something quietly irresistible about Molly McCammon's artwork. Rendered in her signature limited palette with that characteristic grain and worn-in texture, the print channels the warmth of a beloved mid-century picture book. The subject is a charming pug turned into bold, simplified forms that feel both nostalgic and contemporary. It's a print that will make you smile every time you see it.
McCammon is a Dundee-based illustrator and one of Handsome Frank's Handsome Future picks for 2024, an initiative identifying the most exciting emerging talent in illustration. Inspired by mid-century design and printing methods, her work fuses the tactile quality of vintage screen-prints with a fresh, geometric sensibility. She studied illustration at Duncan of Jordanstone before completing an MA in Children's Book Illustration at Cambridge School of Art. Her restrained colour palette, she'll tell you, is partly born of her synaesthesia. Clients include The Telegraph, EasyJet, Time Out and Esquire.
Yellow Portrait is a classic Agathe Singer piece. It's a bold, confident depiction of a woman in her rich, hand-painted gouache style. Yellow is the perfect colour choice, too, as it radiates warmth, self-possession, and the kind of joie de vivre that Singer's work is renowned for. Themes of femininity and beauty run through her entire practice, and this print brings those qualities into something you'd want to live with every day.
Based in Paris, a stone's throw from the Eiffel Tower, Singer paints vibrant worlds of flora, fauna and women. Having studied graphic arts at Duperré and Penninghen, she moved from graphic design into a deep love of gouache: a medium that allows her to achieve the rich textures, visible brushstrokes and vivid colours that define her style. Matisse, Frida Kahlo and Le Douanier Rousseau are among her touchstones. Her commercial clients include Gucci, Sephora USA, L'Oréal, Ralph Lauren and Anthropologie.
Luis Mendo has a gift for capturing the quiet dignity of everyday life, and Bookshop Keeper is a beautiful example. He presents a figure surrounded by the particular atmosphere of a bookshop, all in his distinctive 'digital analogue' style, with warm colour, clever light, and a cheerful calm that feels quite meditative. It's an image for people who love stories, spaces, and the pleasure of looking.
Mendo's path to illustration is not a conventional one. After a 20-year career as an art director and magazine designer across Spain and the Netherlands, he relocated to Tokyo: a sabbatical that became a new life. Drawing from a small studio near the city, he taught himself illustration and was eventually signed by Handsome Frank, after which his career flourished rapidly. His clients now include The New York Times, The Washington Post, Apple, Monocle, Wired and Uniqlo. He describes his way of working as concentrated and zen... a far cry from the meetings and emails of his former life.
Stilts shows exactly why Charlie Davis is one of the most in-demand illustrators working in London today. A moment caught mid-motion – the precarious, joyful balance of stilt-walking – is given the kind of careful compositional and tonal attention that elevates it from scene to artwork. Davis has an innate feel for lighting and atmosphere, and the rich textures of his work give it appealing depth.
Davis is a London-based illustrator who graduated from Falmouth University before spending six years as a graphic designer at Design Bridge – an experience that more than sharpened his eye for composition and commercial craft. He joined Handsome Frank in 2019, and since then his profile has grown dramatically: his work has appeared across the London Underground, on book covers, and in campaigns for Rolls Royce, Fevertree, Apple, Stella Artois, the NBA and Schweppes. He finds his inspiration by walking the city, observing people in unguarded moments, and sketching constantly.
A bonsai tree is an art form that requires time and patience, so there's something deeply fitting about Yo Hosoyamada capturing one. Bonsai One brings her architectural eye to bear on a subject that is all about considered form, light and the relationship between an object and its surroundings. The result is intimate and considered, with that distinctive quality of hers: she doesn't just show you the thing, she makes you feel the space around it.
Originally from Tokyo and now living in London, Hosoyamada came to illustration via an unlikely route: she graduated from the Bartlett School of Architecture at UCL before attending Camberwell College of Arts. With all that architectural training, her illustrations are known for their masterful handling of space, spatiality and light, combining technical precision with a deeply human warmth. Her personal project, 100 Days of Buildings, reimagining global architecture through illustration, brought her significant recognition. She has worked with WIRED UK, ELLE, Monocle, The Times, YouTube Japan and Google.
Launched by Handsome Frank – the illustration agency representing world-class artists since 2010 – Handsome Provisions offers a carefully curated collection of open- and limited-edition archival giclée prints. Each print is hand-checked, packaged and shipped by their London team.