Enid Marx adopted many forms of artistic production throughout her career, including painting, illustration and the design of textiles, book covers and logos. In this print her talent as a textile designer shines through in the way she represents the texture of water melons, courgettes and pumpkins through the repeated, patterned marks made during the linocut process. The vibrant, citric yellow colour is similar to the shade used by textile designer Lucienne Day in her Dandelion Clock design from 1953. We can tell it is a linocut rather than a woodcut because there is no directional grain which is left on the paper when printing from a wooden block. This print was not part of Rawnsley's School Prints scheme but was collected later by Avon County Council to be loaned to schools in the south west.