Olly Moss creates incredible paper-cut silhouettes of his favorite pop culture characters, from Mary Poppins to Darth Vader. They're currently on display in an exhibition at Gallery 1988 in Melrose and will run through May 20th. Check out folks' reactions at the opening night event.
This poster for Bladeworks Fencing Club was designed to show that fencing is a fun way to get fit for anyone—not just nerds or Olympians.
The traditional Spencerian script was hand-lettered by world-renowned typographer Tony DiSpigna and laser-cut so that it appears the words were cut out of the paper Zorro-style by an extremely skilled swordsman.
@ peak sadly not, this guy hails from Brighton I guess it made me smile as I used to live in london and then surrey and remember those tickets well. OH HAI Chris
foz said...@ peak sadly not, this guy hails from Brighton I guess it made me smile as I used to live in london and then surrey and remember those tickets well. OH HAI Chris
Yes, I saw brighton, caught my eye with a couple of friends based there... good job for us they didn't buy a season ticket :happy:
For the past seven (nearly eight?) years I’ve been working exclusively with ledger paper. I’m interested in exploring ideas about serial structure, currency, our financial architecture, capital as an ungrounded sign (the dematerialization of capital), and “value” in general.
Yeah i'm sure i've seen it about too. That is ^ very nice. My daughter has been mucking about with multiple plane stuff, but she was actually drawing and colouring the various planes.
"Keun Young Park's finely textured collages approach the veracity of photographs. As they should, since that’s exactly what they were before the artist saturated them in color and ripped them into thousands of pieces, only to painstakingly reconstitute them into quiet images of faces, draped arms, and cupped hands."
Comments
Japanese perfect paper mini replicas of musical instruments called PePaKuRa
holy moly, some good bits happening in this
Olly Moss creates incredible paper-cut silhouettes of his favorite pop culture characters, from Mary Poppins to Darth Vader. They're currently on display in an exhibition at Gallery 1988 in Melrose and will run through May 20th. Check out folks' reactions at the opening night event.
Check out the exclusive interview with Olly at Slash Film
This poster for Bladeworks Fencing Club was designed to show that fencing
is a fun way to get fit for anyone—not just nerds or Olympians.
The traditional Spencerian script was hand-lettered by world-renowned typographer Tony DiSpigna
and laser-cut so that it appears the words were cut out of the paper Zorro-style by an extremely skilled swordsman.
.....................
the last one's the best, imo. isn't it always that way?
The official trailer for the new documentary, Between The Folds. Visit http://www.greenfusefilms.com for more information
some cool cardboardy stuff from cartonlab (foreign!)
not the most sensible idea, i'd have thought...
paper skull from d-sturbed
~ and hi, welcome aboard
HAI FOZ!
OH HAI Chris
3 hours
:awkward:
jill sylvia
A torso with removable organs for the Science Lab of the International School Nadi, Fiji Islands built entirely from 200gms/sqm white card
origami joel's insane origami
make sure you check out his photostream in it's entirety in order to see a whole load of awesome. christ on a bike.
http://michaeljlomax.blogspot.com/2012/01/to-get-my-new-blog-rolling-here-is.html
http://thomasallenonline.com/
http://www.ingesimonis.nl/Inge_Simonis-paperlamps.html
by mandy smith
Photo-cuts by Lucas Simoes
jack chen's cardboard yamaha r1
8-bit pop-up cards!
those are simple and clever and goodstuff.
more, of course, at her site.
...........
pinned collage work by David Adey there is, naturally, more.
this is eerie stuff.
and there *is* an edit post button, no?
"Keun Young Park's finely textured collages approach the veracity of photographs. As they should, since that’s exactly what they were before the artist saturated them in color and ripped them into thousands of pieces, only to painstakingly reconstitute them into quiet images of faces, draped arms, and cupped hands."
Alternate TItle: "What OCD Looks Like"
via flick to the r
...so, all this posting you're doing on here, visual research for roadmarque?