Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
One of my main tools as a User Experience Designer is pencil and paper, which is fast, easy, flexible and remarkably powerful, unless you get mired in the scanning, uploading and emailing cycle. A good document camera, like the IPEVO Ziggi-HD High-Definition USB Document Camera not only allows for real-time visual communication, but is a great tool for capturing the way users use devices and their apps.
I've been doing something link the CNCH wallet from Portsmith Co. for quite some time with just a cardboard card and rubber bands from grocery story asparagus bundles, but this, this is handsomely crafted add some real style to the apparatus. Super-thin birch, oak, walnut or stainless steel with an elastic strap. There's even the stainless steel one with in-built bottle opener.
Czech photographer Lukas Holas has created this astound series on Behance entitled, Portraits of Animals.
The Royal Mansour in Marrakesh has some of the most stunning architecture using the craftsmen of Morocco to create an unmistakeable hotel architecture.
via Fubiz
Also known as Tackyshack, Virginia-based photographer Jeremy Jackson, creates, in both in 35mm film and digital light paintings in-camera without any Photoshop.
He explains:
“The world is your canvas. Anything you can imagine can be painted a million different ways, time and space take on new meaning. Light is the brush and the environment is the canvas.”
via Design Taxi
I love dodocases, since their very first one that looked like a moleskin for the iPad. This canvas and leather iPhone sleeve also has a little pocket for a few cards and cash.
Sarasota has been the winter headquarters for a number of circuses, most notably the Ringling Brothers Circus (there is of course, their legacy: Ringling Museum, Ringling School of Art and Design, for example).
Here from the pages of LIFE magazine are some day-in-the-life photos of the circus girls in Sarasota in and around 1949.
via Vintag.es
Fifty carefully chosen images of the exploration of Mars make up the exhibit, Spirit & Opportunity: 10 Years Roving Across Mars at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
via Lost at E Minor
Eclectic Method schools us in this video on the history of sampling in hip-hop and dance music, including classics like “Funky Drummer,” “Amen, Brother,” “UFO."
Such a fun little detail, the bamboo style on the Kikkerland Biodegradable Paper Straws, Bamboo. The Red and Blue Polka Dot ones are sweet too.
What an amazingly beautiful collection of animal photos set in the stark of winter.
via Bored Panda
Polish architect Jakub Szczesny designed the Keret House in Warsaw into a gap between two other buildings. It is 72 centimeters at its narrowest and 122 centimeters in the widest.
Szczesny:
That is why at first it seems that the construction of living space within such premise is impossible. Keret House is to contradict that false image, simultaneously broadening the concept of impossible architecture.
Finnish photographer Herra Kuulapaa in his series High Speed Ballistics captures, incredibly, the bullets rocketing out of the gun barrels amid smoke and fire. Amazing.
Emmy Award-winning cinematographer and founder of UltraSlo, Alan Teitel brings us this 4,000fps video of a match head lighting on fire.
Colin Murray for Bourne & Shepherd, ca. 1880s.
Devereau Chumrau - Actor & Yoga Practioner
This guest post is from actor Devereau Chumrau.
Devereau may be a native of Los Angeles, but it is also the time she spent in Ghana, in Europe and the UK, and largely as a student of the Asolo Conservatory in Florida, that has shaped her vision as an actor and as an artist. She has, all along the way, worked to develop her interest and experience in acting for the stage and for the screen.
Catch her show LOVECRAFT: Nightmare Suite opening Jan 31 at the Visceral Company in Hollywood.
Devereau:
Just call me yogini from now on!
This awesome exhibition at the Smithsonian’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, “Yoga: The Art of Transformation," has redefined my understanding of yoga with its 17 centuries of images and objects documenting yoga's history.
It's so great to be able to geek out on my fascination with both yoga and art history.
The exhibit page on the Smithsonian site has so much enthralling history in the very specific stories that go along with the beautiful images.
See also 5 things to buy the Hot Yoga enthusiast in your life »
Yukino Ohmura uses thousands of bright dot stickers to create these astounding night cityscapes. It is an illusion that disappears when you walk up to the panels.
Yukino says:
Illusion turns out to be truth by keeping a distance from it, and truth may turn out to be illusion too. We are trying to struggle in this world which is filled with uncertain and unstable truths. My artworks are part of the truths cut out from this chaotic world.
South African artist Jono Dry not only has the incredible ability to draw these photorealistic drawings, but also has a surrealistic eye.
Photographer Jesús Chapa-Malacara uses his passion as a former ballet dancer to create this gorgeous Dance Prints series. His KICKSTARTER campaign details his vision and ambitious for a bigger and better series.
via Peta Pixel
British artist Benjamin Shine takes a single sheet of tulle and folds and irons it to create these stunning near photographic portraits.
Shine:
“The idea of ‘painting with fabric’ led to the development of this technique where the portrait image is created through the intricate pleating and pressing of a single length of tulle fabric. The technique aims to utilize the translucent qualities of the tulle fabric to generate various gradients, tones and textures."
via Bored Panda