Thursday, November 5, 2009


1. Found sketch 2. Necklace by Elva Fields 3. YSL cuff
4. Brigitte Bardot & Jane Birkin
“Do not ask yourself what the world needs;
ask yourself what makes you come alive.
And then go and do that.
Because what the world needs is people who have come alive.”
~ Howard Thurman
A Woman's appetite is twice that of a man's;
her sexual desire, four times;
her intelligence, eight times."
~ Sanskrit Proverb

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

when the night comes

matchbook art

diving alongside

Polaroid art by Meghan Colson, currently studying studio art and advertising at Michigan State University.

look closer

Keri Smith's How To Be An Explorer Of The World

ka-boom

Never give a pretty girl a hand grenade...


Never Give A Pretty Girl A Hand Grenade
Posted on For The Love Of Type ~ work for the Print Matters exhibition. A little bit of Hoefler Text Italic, ten illustrations and 3 hours worth of hand-sewn binding, it folds into a neat 150mm x 150mm book.

rark!

From Mrs Eaves' blog For The Love Of Type...

Monday, September 28, 2009

we the people

I love the letterpress print States United by Gregory at beauchamping on Etsy, who says: "Originally this project was titled Heartland. Then States United. Then Heartland. States United. Heartland. States United. Heartland. And finally...States United. Although i suppose it could also be called 'We The People,' because when I look at it now, I see faces in Alabama, Illinois, Wisconsin and a few other states."

Ray Nichols at Lead Graffiti in Delaware printed them from a
copperplate on his Vandercook flatbed press.


Sunday, September 27, 2009

and i walked

Am coveting Rob Ryan's And I Walked tape on etsy.

the impossible project

T H E B A D N E W S
Production of analog Instant Film stopped in June 2008, closing the factories in Mexico (Instant Packfilm production) and the Netherlands (Instant Integral production). Next month, the last batch of Polaroid film will pass its use-by date and the era of instant Polaroid photography, one of the greatest inventions of the 20th century, will draw to a close. To mark the film’s final use-by, or expiration, date, Polaroid: Exp 09.10.09 at the Atlas Gallery in London brings together artists as diverse as the Hungarian-born fashion photographer and photojournalist André Kertész and the provocative Japanese photographer Nobuyoshi Araki, as well as a number of contemporary British artists, including Marc Quinn, commissioned specially for the show (October 9 to November 28, at the Atlas Gallery, 49 Dorset Street, London W1).
T H E G O O D N E W S
The Impossible Project has been founded with the concrete aim to re-invent and re-start production of analog integral film for vintage Polaroid cameras. It has acquired the complete film production equipment in Enschede (NL) from Polaroid, has signed a 10-year lease agreement on the factory building (see above), and has engaged the most experienced team of Integral Film experts worldwide. The Impossible mission is to develop a new product with new characteristics, consisting of new optimised components, produced with a streamlined modern setup. An innovative and fresh analog material, sold under a new brand name that perfectly will match the global re-positioning of Integral Films.

altered text

Twice a year students from NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) exhibit their final projects. Student Alex Kauffman chose a passage from All the King's Men and then systematically cut out all but one letter from the printed page, leaving it behind wherever it appeared. He then repeated this with the same passage across many more pages for each letter and symbol. The full story behind the process can be read here.




Sunday, August 23, 2009

different strokes...

Letter Cult have posted their Best of 2009... so far... including some incredible work by Adam Garcia, Andy Smith & Will Bryant, and Enkeling.



the romanticist

I have eaten beef stew with silent, shabby men in cheap eateries and fingered the last two pennies in my pocket with anger and irony … I have dined most sumptuously in a spacious Park Avenue home, duck brought forth in silver dishes by a butler … I have seen $.10 movies on Times Square, seated in the first row of the balcony in shirtsleeves, smoking and laughing … under a lashing rain and gale, I have gazed at the angry mid-Atlantic for a moment, pausing in my labours … I have stood on a Liverpool street corner in the middle of a drowsy afternoon and cursed the cobbles because the pubs had closed … I have made love to women in Canada, Washington, D.C., Nova Scotia, England, Greenland, New York City, Maryland and New England … I have lain drunk in the gutter of a street … I climbed a mountain in Greenland and gazed down on the slim ribbon of Ikatek Fjord … I have toiled in the sun on construction jobs from Portsmouth, New Hampshire to Alexandria, Virginia … I have attended cocktail parties in New York City penthouses … I have worked in mills … I have worked in garages … I have sold door to door … I have worked as a reporter on a newspaper … I have starved in a cheap urine-smelling room in Hartford, CT … I have dated actresses, models and social workers … I have brawled in streets, in bar entrances and in cafeterias … I have heard great symphonies and been transported … I have walked the streets, a lonely U.S. Navy gob and sought women … I have languished in hospitals and shuffled cards in melancholy abstraction … I have written reams and reams of writings … and through it all, I have always been restless, unhappy and seeking new horizons. What shall I do?

~ Jack Kerouac, The Romanticist, September 1943 (photograph Harry Benson, Berlin Kiss)

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

typos

Opening this Thursday at the Electrik Sheep Gallery (which is a brilliant gallery, by the way), in the cold northern city of Newcastle, is a show by typographer Seb Lester. If you like raw talent then you’ll love his work. Prints also available online at Seb's website.



Monday, June 15, 2009

best invite ever

I'm taking it as a sign. Not only does this give hope and meaning to a very traditional, non-traditional girl like myself... but they also just happened to get married on my birthday. Printed by the fine folks at Kayrock in Williamsburg. Double-click, enlarge, read and enjoy...

Friday, June 5, 2009

for burma

Burma from marusa on Vimeo.

Burma VJ

(photo: Ed Fraiman)

Burma is the largest country in Southeast Asia. It is just south of China and is also known as the Union of Mayanmar. Burma is currently ruled by a military regime led by senior general Than Shwe, the head of state who governs the country through violence, suppression fear. The co-founder of Myanmar's main opposition party - the National League for Democracy (NLD) - is Aung San Suu Kyi, who has endured unofficial detention, house arrest and restrictions on her movement since 1989. She is one of the country's best-known political figures and campaigners for human rights, and numerous organizations - including Amnesty International - have appealed for her release continually. In September 25, 2007 over 5,000 monks lead a non-violent protest in Yangon. The military responded by opening fire on the crowd. A new documentary called Burma VJ covered this protest from the ground up. The people of burma continue to fight oppression despite the military stronghold. It is important that people around the world understand what is happening in Burma and put pressure on their governments to call for aid and intervention. This is not a trendy cause. This is a human cause. Please support Burma VJ, which is out in theatres this month.




Wednesday, June 3, 2009

so there

New Math by Craig Damrauer.

starlings at eastbourne pier

Feist's cover of one of my all-time favorite songs:
Lover's Spit by Broken Social Scene.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

alice stevenson

Love this print Sensory Perception by Alice Stevenson. Alice graduated from the University of Brighton Illustration program in 2005. Since then she's been working as a freelance illustrator for folks such as Faber & Faber, Puffin, the G2 section of The Guardian and the Time Out Guides.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

sigh...

Let's Get Lost by Shaun Sundholm.

Shaun says "This project is the firstborn child conceived from a life-long love affair with photography and typography. The photo series was shot at an abandoned (and rumored to be haunted) ranch in central Oregon and the type was inspired by my early days as a screen-printer. These pieces complete the sentences that the pictures and the words could never quite say on their own."

Thursday, May 21, 2009

sparks & stars

Galactic Center of Milky Way Rises over Texas Star Party from William Castleman on Vimeo. How much does this make you want to hit the road and head for somewhere in the middle of nowhere tonight, to just lay flat on your back and gaze upwards until the early hours? It's a time lapse video of the night sky as it passes over the 2009 Texas Star Party in Fort Davis, Texas. The galactic core of Milky Way is brightly displayed. Images were taken with a 15mm fisheye lens.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

tagged

The New York Stationery Show is under way... here are a some of the wares on offer... mini gift tags by Sesame Letterpress.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

everything's okay

Everything's Okay from Natalie Perkins's drawing set.

michael fragstein



I am a big fan of Michael Fragstein's work. Here's a music video he made for the band Hitboutique from Stuttgart. I think you know the song. Michael Born was born in Poland, studied architecture and design in Stuttgart and Lisbon, and co-founded Büro Achter April in Stuttgart.

Friday, May 1, 2009

milan design week 0*9

Dutch design studio Muurbloem decorated the streets of the Tortona area of Milan with sand during the last day of the Milan Furniture Fair to highlight its work in pattern-making and wall art.
For Moooi, the all-women Front Design team digitized a Royal Delft vase with three-dimensional software and distorted it so that it looks like it's blowing away in a gust of wind.

Teresa Sapey Lights Via Monte Napoleone With Her Paper Lantern...

poet laureate

Today Carol Ann Duffy became the first woman poet laureate of Great Britain, and the first openly gay poet laureate. I celebrate this day, and I celebrate her wonderful body of work. I am a better woman myself for having read and digested her words. Here's her poem Valentine:

Not a red rose or a satin heart.
I give you an onion.
It is a moon wrapped in brown paper.
It promises light
like the careful undressing of love.
Here.
It will blind you with tears
like a lover.
It will make your reflection
a wobbling photo of grief.
I am trying to be truthful.
Not a cute card or a kissogram.
I give you an onion.
Its fierce kiss will stay on your lips,
possessive and faithful
as we are,
for as long as we are.
Take it.
Its platinum loops shrink to a wedding-ring,
if you like.
Lethal.
Its scent will cling to your fingers,
cling to your knife.

Friday, April 24, 2009

a case of you...

Monday, April 20, 2009

the closing of a chapter

"The seasons remind me that I must keep changing. and I want to change because it is God's way...I want to keep my soul fertile for the changes so things keep getting born in me, so things keep dying when it is time for things to die. I want to keep walking away from the person I was a moment ago, because a mind is made to figure things out, not to read the same page recurrently. Only the good stories have the characters different at the end than they were at the beginning. And the closest thing I can liken life to is a book, the way it stretches out on paper, page after page, as if to trick the mind into thinking it isn't all happening at once. Life has pressed you and me into a book, too, this tiny chapter we share together...Everything we were is no more, and what we will become, will become what was. This is from where the story stems, the stuff of its construction lying at our feet like cut strips of philosophy."
-- Donald Miller

Monday, March 30, 2009

earth hour 09

I'd had the best of intentions to have an Earth Hour hootananny at my place this past Saturday evening, but then decided that my flat still isn't visitor-friendly, seeing as how I have no chairs, no table, and really nowhere for any more than two people to hang out at any one time. I also had visions of knocking over tealights and setting fire to my neighbours bungalows, all in close proximity. Regardless, Earth Hour 2009 went on without us, and my friend Bridget and I did our best, sitting outside with candles lit and copious amounts of wine (my ecological response to most Saturday evenings, admittedly). If you're not familiar with the concept, Earth Hour started in Sydney in 2007, and quickly grew into a global observance. More than 1,000 cities in over 80 countries observed Earth Hour 2009 on Saturday March 28th, as homes, office towers and landmarks turned off their lights for an hour starting at 8.30 pm local time to raise awareness about climate change and the threat from rising greenhouse gas emissions. Collected here are a series of before-and-after photographs - which (starting with the second one below) will fade between on and off when clicked. Pretty cool stuff.

Friday, March 27, 2009

off the planet


Am having a blast-from-the-past moment and remembering one of my favourite commercials.. Levi's Reach For The Sky, directed by Jonathan Glazer (soundtrack by Handel!), back in 2001. The most expensive advert at the time of release.

land ho...

Your Love Is The Anchor by British illustrator Ellie Cryer...

sewn in...

I Love You So Much It Breaks My Heart by Joetta Maue on Etsy...

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

mia delcasino

San Diego based artist Mia DelCasino is one of my favorite photographers. Her work is breathtakingly ethereal and really needs to be viewed up close and personal in order to appreciate the full force of its beauty (the pieces are rather large in actuality). Congratulations to Mia, who just won an honor of distinction accolade in the annual Photography Masters Cup for her piece Kerry Blue (top). May your photographic talents continue to reflect the inner and outer beauty that you yourself possess (whoop-whoop!).

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

paper source

When not leading the glamorous vida loca as assistant to a television producer, I can also be found working the register (or cutting a yard of ribbon, or providing a stamp embossing demonstration, or helping foolish young couples in love choose their wedding invitations...), at Paper Source in Pasadena. Seeing as how I've been a paper junkie from a very early age, it's pretty much like allowing a crack addict be a drug pusher. I clock in, look around me, and immediately my eyes begin to glaze over and I start to drool a little... and then I get really helpful and annoying and adopt a deliriously peppy attitude. Yes, I am that person in a store who will yell "Hellooooo" at you the minute you step foot in the door. I wear my Paper Source badge with pride, yo.

rob ryan

I randomly stumbled across Rob Ryan's book This Is For You one afternoon while browsing in the Muswell Hill Book Store, and I've been a fan ever since. This Is For You is a fairytale told through paper cut-out art, which explores the themes of love and loneliness. Rob is a British artist who specializes in papercutting and screen-printing, and who has a Masters in printmaking from the Royal College of Art.
'YOU HAVE ALREADY GONE TO BED. I STAY UP TO KEEP DRINKING AND LISTEN TO MUSIC AND MY GOD IT SOUNDS GOOD. PEOPLE KEEP ON MAKING GREAT MUSIC. BUT THERE ARE ONLY DO MANY NOTES AND ORDERS TO PUT THEM IN. HOW DO THEY DO IT?? HUMAN BEINGS SO RELENTLESS IT BREAKS YOUR HEART. JUST WHEN YOU’RE ABOUT TO GIVE UP ON THEM ALTOGETHER – THE SHIT WAY THEY TREAT EACH OTHER – AND THEN YOU HEAR A SONG SO TRUE AND BEAUTIFUL YOU INSTANTLY FORGIVE THEM EVERYTHING AND HEAR THEIR REAL VOICE “I KNOW I DO WRONG BUT I REALLY WANT TO TRY TO BE GOOD.” AND THEN I THOUGHT ABOUT MY DEATH AND ALL THE GREAT MUSIC THAT WOULD BE MADE FROM THAT DAY ON AND I WOULDN’T GET TO HEAR A SINGLE NOTE. AND I CRIED TEARS OF 100% SELFISH JEALOUSY. JEALOUS OF SOMETHING YET EVEN TO HAPPEN THAT WOULD NEVER AFFECT MY ROTTING DECOMPOSING CORPSE. THE HOT LITTL TEARS OF THE CHILD WHO WANTED EVERYTHING.'

''THIS BELL WILL RING WHEN I AM CRUEL TO YOU AND MAKE YOU CRY' and 'THIS BELL WILL RING WHEN WE GO BOWLING NEXT'

wall art

I've been looking around for some art work to adorn the walls of my new (and very bare) pad in Venice Beach. I am obsessing over these pieces that I came across on Etsy... 1. I Can't See Past You by Julia Pott, a freelance illustrator/animator based in East London; 2. Charmed, I'm Sure, a letterpress print by Honey Lux Press; 3. Screaming Bird, by Andrea Zuill, which makes me laugh every time I look at it; 4. Lina Stores on Brewer Street in Soho, which I used to pass regularly when I lived in London... Amazingly, the pieces themselves are all very inexpensive (they range from $5.00 to $32.00) - the framing will no doubt cost more than the art work...

paddle out polaroid

Love this polaroid transfer of a surfer girl by She Hit Pause on Etsy...