Sherbet Lemon Sweets

£5

In Stock

Your product successfully added to bag

Free UK delivery on orders £60 and over

The taste of Summer! Sumptuous sherbet-filled fruit-flavoured hard-boiled sweets with beautiful illustrated gift box featuring Eric Ravilious' 'The Grape House' (1936). Made in the UK.

 

Ingredients: sugar, glucose syrup, dextrose monohydrate, citric acid, malic acid, sodium bicarbonate, flavouring, colours; turmeric (E100).

 

Allergy advice: see allergens in capitals. May also contain NUTS.

 

Suitable for vegetarians. 

Author/Artist/Designer

Eric Ravilious

Dimensions

125g

Composition

Ingredients: sugar, glucose syrup, dextrose monohydrate, citric acid, malic acid, sodium bicarbonate, flavouring, colours; turmeric (E100). May also contain NUTS.

Product code

166343

Delivery

 

Our standard delivery charges and estimated timescales are as follows. Selected product exceptions apply; see product details. International deliveries may also be subject to customs fees or taxes upon arrival, which are your responsibility.

Standard delivery per order
UK
£5 – or FREE for orders over £60
3-6 working days
Europe
£20
6-10 working days
Rest of World
£30
10-14 working days

Returns

 

If you have any concerns, most items are eligible for a full refund within 28 days of purchase. Exceptions apply, such as perishable items; customised or personalised items; and items with a broken hygiene seal.

 

Find out more here.

About the artist
Eric Ravilious 1903-1942

Eric Ravilious

Eric Ravilious was a painter, designer, illustrator and wood engraver. He was born in 1903 in the East Sussex, and the environment of his upbringing is evident in his popular watercolours of the South Downs and the south coast. He was particularly inspired by chalk hill figures. He brought a unique perspective to his depiction of England between the wars, creating landscapes with a quirky, modernist sensibility. Ravilious served as a war artist, creating dazzling seascapes and fresh studies of planes in flight, and died when his plane was lost off the coast of Iceland in 1942. The charm and flair of his work has ensured its enduring popularity.