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Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Monday, September 22, 2008
Farmin' and Paper Dolls
Ok, so the title is used lightly. Pretty much referring to a couple of things I'm into lately. The thing is, I haven't posted for some time. Sorry 'bout that. I noticed as I look through other Bloggers' posts, they always apologize when they haven't posted for some time. I suppose they feel that whatever audience they have built up, needs to be entertained so they'll keep coming back for more. Well, I'm pretty sure I don't have a regular audience, so, why am I apologizing? Huh?...
We recently picked up our household and plopped it down on an acreage basically in the middle of nowhere. Its been really fun, we've got room to play, and about 40 acres of pasture, but, I have to admit, we miss Target, Wal-Mart and Home Depot being within a 5 minute drive of home. If I forget a bolt during a project, I'm stopped. Its been an adjustment. Needless to say, we are growing and learning... The neighbors keep asking me what I'm going to do with the pasture, I'm a city boy, so, I ask them if they know of any type of animal that doesn't eat or poop, and that is what I'm going to raise in the pasture. They laugh politely and walk away thinking I'm a big idiot. Oh well.
On to the paper dolls. Its something else I've been thinking about lately for some reason. Farmin' vs paper dolls? Not sure what they have to do with one another. Anyway, I was checking out Instructables.com the other day and came across a great post by a paper doll enthusiast named TangMu. This Instructable is loaded full of directions for making your own paper dolls and links to other great paper doll sites. Take a look. Enjoy. Make your own Farmin' Paper Doll.
We recently picked up our household and plopped it down on an acreage basically in the middle of nowhere. Its been really fun, we've got room to play, and about 40 acres of pasture, but, I have to admit, we miss Target, Wal-Mart and Home Depot being within a 5 minute drive of home. If I forget a bolt during a project, I'm stopped. Its been an adjustment. Needless to say, we are growing and learning... The neighbors keep asking me what I'm going to do with the pasture, I'm a city boy, so, I ask them if they know of any type of animal that doesn't eat or poop, and that is what I'm going to raise in the pasture. They laugh politely and walk away thinking I'm a big idiot. Oh well.
On to the paper dolls. Its something else I've been thinking about lately for some reason. Farmin' vs paper dolls? Not sure what they have to do with one another. Anyway, I was checking out Instructables.com the other day and came across a great post by a paper doll enthusiast named TangMu. This Instructable is loaded full of directions for making your own paper dolls and links to other great paper doll sites. Take a look. Enjoy. Make your own Farmin' Paper Doll.
Labels:
action figure,
art,
blogs,
collectible dolls,
design,
DIY,
farmer,
free,
free stuff,
garden,
green living,
illustration,
paper dolls,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture,
toys
Friday, July 11, 2008
How to DIY Anything
Have you ever just wanted to be able to build anything? Maybe that's just me... but, in case I get stuck for project ideas, I have found the Mack Daddy of all DIY sites! Check out Instructables.com.
I have never seen so many cool, useful, useless do it yourself projects in my life! Anything from building a solar heater from beer cans to how to make pulled pork. You can find out how SOMEONE has done it here.
I have never seen so many cool, useful, useless do it yourself projects in my life! Anything from building a solar heater from beer cans to how to make pulled pork. You can find out how SOMEONE has done it here.
Labels:
alternative energy,
art,
DIY,
farmer,
free,
free stuff,
green living,
toys
Sunday, March 23, 2008
My Plastic Heart
Check out My Plastic Heart.com to buy all kinds of fantastic wanna be pop culture items. Make a wall of shelves and buy a bunch of figures. Relive your childhood, only in a less wholesome way. Go there... you know you wanna.
Labels:
action figure,
art,
collectible dolls,
culture,
design,
illustration,
painting,
paper dolls,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture,
t-shirts,
toys
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Buy Prints. Save Cash. Help Charities.

Continuing on this vein of art for the masses... everyone has them, prints. They are an easy way to add art to your space, right? Monet's Water Lillies, Edvard Munch's Scream, Van Gogh's Starry Night... on and on, college dorm room staples. The problem is, everyone HAS THEM! Prints are great, but do you want a print that is just like everyone elses? NO! Check out the artists featured on BlueFlip Art. There are a couple reasons, they are cheap, they are good quality and they give the artist's the option to donate to charity with each purchase. Wow! How economically and socially reasonable!
From their site: (Blue Flip Art was created to help bring the work of amazingly talented artists into the hands of an adoring public without charging an arm and a leg. We believe that great art should be available to all, and that it should enrich people as well as the pocketbooks of charities. What's this about charities? Participating BlueFlip artists get to donate 10% of the sale price of their prints to a non-profit charity of their choice. The artist gets compensated for their work, the customer gets a high quality print, and charities get a generous donation. How cool is that?)
So, go to Blue Flip Art and check out their stable of artists including Brian Taylor who I've been following off and on for some time. I'm planning to do a future post on him and some of his projects. He's a creative guy. (And now I'm realizing his style is like the Dekor guy in a recent post as well.) Now, onward! Go buy a new print for your bathroom wall at Blue Flip Art.
Above art copyright Brian Taylor. Check out one of his web sites Candykiller.com
Labels:
art,
culture,
design,
illustration,
painting,
pop culture,
prints
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Dekor? Grudgingly Interested
As a rule, I have an automatic elevated annoyance level for anyone, or company, or product that replaces a letter in a normal word with a different but similar sounding letter in an attempt at being KOOL... (see what I did with "cool" there?), so, when I decided to visit the site of designer, painter, illustrator "Dekor", I was skeptical that I would be interested at all. It just seems that things that are hip, are sometimes too hip, and as a result not hip at all. Know what I mean? Ignorant hip in spite of itself, is way better than "hip because I know how to be hip".
I admit it might be a French cultural thing I'm missing here in his spelling of Dekor, but I doubt it. Poor guy. Regardless, my point is, I ended up liking his work. Shame on me for having preconceived ideas about this designer based on the nickname they decide to go by. (Queue background music for the lesson), "So Michelle, you should never judge a book by its cover."
Anyway, back to Dekor and his work. Good stuff. My gripe with his choice of nickname aside. Gary Baseman-esque with a little dirty Chris Ware mixed in. He's reminiscent of someone else too, but I can't place it at the moment. Regardless, I enjoyed looking at the stuff on this site. Check out Nicolas Tual... otherwise known as "Dekor", [do finger quotes as you say it!] French designer to French stars [who?] and soon... the world! Mu-ah-ha-ha-ha.
I admit it might be a French cultural thing I'm missing here in his spelling of Dekor, but I doubt it. Poor guy. Regardless, my point is, I ended up liking his work. Shame on me for having preconceived ideas about this designer based on the nickname they decide to go by. (Queue background music for the lesson), "So Michelle, you should never judge a book by its cover."
Anyway, back to Dekor and his work. Good stuff. My gripe with his choice of nickname aside. Gary Baseman-esque with a little dirty Chris Ware mixed in. He's reminiscent of someone else too, but I can't place it at the moment. Regardless, I enjoyed looking at the stuff on this site. Check out Nicolas Tual... otherwise known as "Dekor", [do finger quotes as you say it!] French designer to French stars [who?] and soon... the world! Mu-ah-ha-ha-ha.
Labels:
art,
collectible dolls,
culture,
design,
graphic design,
illustration,
painting,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture,
t-shirts,
toys
Sunday, January 6, 2008
Nice Bunny Paper Dolls Updated!

A quick note: Nice Bunny has updated their site and added an obvious link to their very awesome Paper Dolls Artist's Series. Its art for the rest of us. Collect them all! Buy other stuff from these amazing artists!
Image credit to Matt Hawkins and Nice Bunny.
Labels:
action figure,
art,
collectible dolls,
design,
paper dolls,
pop culture,
sculpture,
toys
Monday, November 5, 2007
Cool Wooden Toys From the Future

"Yosegi-Mokuzougan, or joined wooden block construction, is a craft skill where combinations of original and unique colors and textures of different kinds of wood are utilized to express artistic patterns."
Takeji (Take-G) Nakagawa has taken this traditional technique and expanded on it, made it 3-D, and made it his own. Drawing from tradition and incorporating what can only be asian pop culture into his toys and sculptures. Check out the take-g toys site. This guy is amazing! Warm and futuristic, two words that normally oppose one another exist simultaneously in his work.
Difficult to purchase if you are not in Japan, hopefully, that will soon be remedied. Most of the site is in Japanese, but the work pretty much speaks for itself.
Labels:
action figure,
art,
collectible dolls,
culture,
design,
pop culture,
sculpture,
toys
Friday, October 26, 2007
Noteable Other Design Blogs
It occurs to me that there are probably thousands of other design/designer's blogs out there in the blog universe. (I know, its an amazing moment of clarity) Permit me, if you will, to point out a few of my favorite.
design*sponge - Check out the mini-trends page. A daily website run by Brooklyn-based writer, Grace Bonney.
Design Observer - A blog that focuses on design and culture. Often points out the flaws in design and designer's work.
Feed Me Cool Shit - I find the title annoying, but the information spectacular. Great design, great content on design and culture.
design*sponge - Check out the mini-trends page. A daily website run by Brooklyn-based writer, Grace Bonney.
Design Observer - A blog that focuses on design and culture. Often points out the flaws in design and designer's work.
Feed Me Cool Shit - I find the title annoying, but the information spectacular. Great design, great content on design and culture.
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
A Painter and a Sculptor

Jason Ruhl is an artist who paints and works in mixed media. His stuff is minimalist with a history. There is often social commentary mixed in, along with the fantastically clever pop culture reference. He uses pink, which is an arbitrary comment by me, but I love pink. Seriously. His mixed media work includes compositions, of amongst other things, vintage ads and comics and medical drawings. I also think his Polaroids are reviving the media, and this new series of buttons has got some serious potential. Who doesn't love a good button.
Jason belongs to an informal artist's collective called No Fun. I don't believe I know any of this group personally, but they all seem to do great, interesting, valid work. Check out a collabrative effort including some of these artists at this blog spot.
Tracey Scheich is primarily a sculptor who's work is plain and simply elegant. The latest stuff I've seen called "Creatures" is elegant, but fun at the same time. I look at these creatures as little action figures in ceramic. And, that is a good thing in my opinion. These characters have a soul, and a back story, and a running narrative, and a future adventure with other ceramic friends. Love this stuff.
Visit their web sites. Get in touch with them. Buy lots of their work.
Jason belongs to an informal artist's collective called No Fun. I don't believe I know any of this group personally, but they all seem to do great, interesting, valid work. Check out a collabrative effort including some of these artists at this blog spot.

Visit their web sites. Get in touch with them. Buy lots of their work.
Images shown belong to their respective artist. Please visit their web sites for more.
The Cool Hunter

I like to think I am cool enough to "give a shout out" to the following site, but now that I think about it, I put quotes around "give a shout out" in addition to using the slang "give a shout out" which is really dated and not cool at all. Oh well. I accept my uncoolness.
Check out the following site if you want to be cool. The people who update this site are WAY cooler than I am:
The Cool Hunter
Check out the following site if you want to be cool. The people who update this site are WAY cooler than I am:
The Cool Hunter
Picture above credit to The Cool Hunter.net. "Props" to The Cool Hunters, and the designer of the room shown. There I go again with those quote marks.
Labels:
architecture,
art,
culture,
design,
furniture,
green living,
new technology,
paper dolls,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture,
t-shirts
Monday, October 8, 2007
Hella-of-a Designer
Surfing the internet the other day looking for great designers, and the name Hella Jongerius keeps coming up. Rightfully so. One of a crop of great Dutch designers, formerly with the famous Droog Design, now producing work under Jongeriuslab. A substantial list of collections and design accolades to her credit. This is apparently an important designer for our time. I just like the stuff she designs. Insert description of work here... her work is nice to look at, but have you ever noticed that people who write reviews of things use the same language over and over again? Makes it feel unoriginal. I hate that.
Check out her site. I'm curious to hear what you might think we'll remember Jongeriuslab for in 30 years. What is the icon? Is there one piece? Will the style just get grouped into a big group of Dutch designers with "this style". Write a post. I'm curious about your opinions.
Check out her site. I'm curious to hear what you might think we'll remember Jongeriuslab for in 30 years. What is the icon? Is there one piece? Will the style just get grouped into a big group of Dutch designers with "this style". Write a post. I'm curious about your opinions.
Labels:
architecture,
art,
culture,
design,
furniture,
new technology,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture
Thursday, September 27, 2007
My Favorite Designers... Today
I'm going to compile a list of my favorite designers... as of today that is. I reserve the right to drop or add a designer as I so desire. Why is it important that I rank my favorites? Because I can. Why should it mean anything to anyone else? Because they might like these designers too.
Designer for me includes graphics, animation, engineering, furniture... basically anything and anyone that makes something that is visually pleasing to me.
In no particular order:
-Takashi Murakami - I talked about him in a previous post.
-Chris Ware - phenomenal illustrator of Jimmy Corrigan, Quimby the Mouse and other kitschy characters and their comics. Totally retro style, and correct me if I'm wrong, all hand illustrated! Amazing!
-Imaginary Forces - They do all kinds of animation and motion graphics. I like the saying they have on their home page, "At one point in time, everything had not been done."
-Johannes Gutenberg - Arguably the most important figure in communication before Al Gore invented the internet? Known for the Gutenberg Bible, but really, movable type... I realize it is a stretch to call him a "designer," but so much that he did is so important to design. And what design minded person doesn't love the look of moveable type.
-Chank Diesel and his Chank Co. - He's a new breed in type designers. I realize this might be a bit of a stretch, but I like that he doesn't take himself too seriously, and just keeps cranking out fonts.
-Marek Reichman and the Aston Martin Design Team - Responsible for the Aston Martin... a very, hot, production car.
-Frank Gehry - I realize he's become cliche, but you have to appreciate his crazy, computer driven designs for museums all over the world. The firm should disband however, and become architect martyrs...leave us wanting more.
-Antoni Gaudi - The original Frank Gehry
Designer for me includes graphics, animation, engineering, furniture... basically anything and anyone that makes something that is visually pleasing to me.
In no particular order:
-Takashi Murakami - I talked about him in a previous post.
-Chris Ware - phenomenal illustrator of Jimmy Corrigan, Quimby the Mouse and other kitschy characters and their comics. Totally retro style, and correct me if I'm wrong, all hand illustrated! Amazing!
-Imaginary Forces - They do all kinds of animation and motion graphics. I like the saying they have on their home page, "At one point in time, everything had not been done."
-Johannes Gutenberg - Arguably the most important figure in communication before Al Gore invented the internet? Known for the Gutenberg Bible, but really, movable type... I realize it is a stretch to call him a "designer," but so much that he did is so important to design. And what design minded person doesn't love the look of moveable type.
-Chank Diesel and his Chank Co. - He's a new breed in type designers. I realize this might be a bit of a stretch, but I like that he doesn't take himself too seriously, and just keeps cranking out fonts.
-Marek Reichman and the Aston Martin Design Team - Responsible for the Aston Martin... a very, hot, production car.
-Frank Gehry - I realize he's become cliche, but you have to appreciate his crazy, computer driven designs for museums all over the world. The firm should disband however, and become architect martyrs...leave us wanting more.
-Antoni Gaudi - The original Frank Gehry
Labels:
architecture,
art,
culture,
design,
furniture,
pop culture,
prints,
sculpture
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Print/Pattern Vacation
Take a little vacation from your day at my fellow blogger's site print & pattern. A site devoted to the "world of surface pattern & design." Great designs... err, patterns. Very simply enjoyable. Worth a visit.
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