Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2020

Paper Cutouts - Creative Paper Cutting Turn into Arts Designs

Paper Cutouts - Creative Paper Cutting Turn into Arts Designs | Artist Creates Intricate Cut-Outs From Single Sheet of Paper | Simple Paper Cutting Art And Craft Ideas For Kids | 3D Paper Art, Paper Cut Illustrators 

Papercutting or paper cutting is the art of paper designs. The art has evolved uniquely all over the world to adapt to different cultural styles. One traditional distinction most styles share in common is that the designs are cut from a single sheet of paper as opposed to multiple adjoining sheets as in collage.

Paper cut art appeared during the Han dynasty in 4th century AD after the Chinese official, Cai Lun invented paper in 105 AD. The oldest surviving paper cut out is a symmetrical circle from the 6th century Six Dynasties period found in Xinjiang China. Papercutting continued to be practiced during the Song and Tang Dynasties as a popular form of decorative art.

By the eighth or ninth century papercutting appeared in West Asia and in Turkey in the 16th century. The knowledge of Paper making did not reach Europe until the 13th century so papercutting could only have arrived after that. In Switzerland and Germany for example it was not until the 16th century that papercut art or scherenschnitte was established (see also silhouette).

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Hannah Bullen-Ryner Beautiful Birds Composed From Flowers and Leaves

Hannah Bullen-Ryner Beautiful Birds Composed From Flowers and Leaves | The Botanical Bird Art | Artist Uses Leaves And Flowers To Create Mesmerizing Bird Portraits 

Whether we've already discovered them or not, we all have our own ways of finding inner peace. For Hannah Bullen-Ryner, it comes through reconnecting with Mother Earth.

Bullen-Ryner composes beautiful birds using only natural materials found locally and no permanent fixings. Scavenging her surroundings, she puts together flowers, leaves, twigs, and berries to form delicate portraits either on the woodland floor or under one small oak. When she's done, they last only a few moments before nature starts reclaiming them. Luckily, that brief period of time is enough for Hannah to photograph her artworks, or as she calls it, offerings to Mother Nature. Soon after, they get taken by the breeze, rearranged by the rain, or wriggled through by an insect and leave no trace behind.

The artist says she creates to share her love for nature and to soothe her soul, and you can definitely feel it in the photos of her ephemeral pieces.

Bullen-Ryner is both an artist and someone who appreciates nature, having been outdoors her whole life. "Originally a painter and photographer, I have always found art to be cathartic, a way to let it all out, a way to express what couldn't be said "Equally, I have always felt deeply connected to the Earth and to her magic and her ability to soothe a weary soul."

Monday, September 14, 2020

Jolanda Stokkermans - Mom Creates Animal-Inspired Edible Food Art

Jolanda Stokkermans - Mom Creates Animal-Inspired Edible Food Art 

Jolanda Stokkermans is a married mom living in Koersel, a small village in Belgium, with two children and two Jack Russells. One of her superpowers is meal prepping. Roughly a year ago, Jolanda started creating easy recipes and taking pictures of them, and got so carried away with it, she began presenting the food on a plate in the shape of famous actors, gorgeous flowers, and adorable animals.

Jolanda, aka De Meal Prepper, forms the edible pictures in a realistic style and even paints them, too. Doing both requires immense attention to detail. For example, while balancing different components on a single plate, the mother goes as far as using spices as watercolor pigments to add depth to the piece.

Jolanda Stokkermans can do magic with food. She makes works of art with food and then posts the result on Instagram. On the social networking site, she has great success as 'The Meal Prepper'. Her FoodArt even made it to Ukrainian television, which promptly sent a camera crew to Koersel. Jolanda hopes that she will also make a name for herself in the catering world in the future.

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Folded Towel Animals | Creative Bath Towel Arts In Hotels

Folded Bath Towel Animals | Creative Bath Towel Arts Experiences In Hotel Rooms 

A towel animal is a depiction of an animal created by folding small towels. It is conceptually similar to origami, but uses towels rather than paper. Some common towel animals are elephants, snakes, rabbits and swans.

Towel art has become quite popular in many hotels, resorts and cruise ships around the world. It is entertaining to return to your room, intrigued by what special touch housekeeping has added to make you feel at home.

Who would have thought that a humble towel with the main purpose of rubbing wet droplets off your skin or patting your hair dry would get so much publicity? One cannot deny that the trend of creative towel art has an appeal to everyone.

Friday, September 4, 2020

Felt Food - Make Felted Fake Foods And Animals Patterns

Make these play foods from cloth felt: fruits, vegetables, birds, cupcakes, pies, drinks, pizza, hamburger, sushi, pop tarts, tacos, bread and much more. 

Encourage your children to be interested in food and cooking by making them soft felt play food using these free patterns. Older children may want to join you to make these creative craft projects. Felt food makes a wonderful handmade gift for a child, inspiring hours of pretend play. You can create enough food to stock an entire kitchen or simply.

I felt the world around me. My whimsical creations often include realistic-looking food, birds, elements from Russian folklore, and nature references. My inspiration comes from memories of living in the former Soviet Union in the early ’90s, as well as my life today. Often symbolic in nature, my felted whimsies tell stories connecting past and present.

Check out our felt food selection for the very best in unique or custom, handmade pieces from our pretend play shops.

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

World’s Largest Paper Flowers | Colorful Paper Flower Designs

I Design Some Of The World’s Largest Paper Flowers | Colorful Paper Flower Designs – 500+ Handcrafted Petals – Flower Child Project At Rawlings Conservatory 

Maryland-based paper artist, and an industrial engineer-gone-rogue, obsessed with turning plain white cardstock sheets and discarded cardboard boxes into colossal, unimaginable paper flowers. she cut and paint each petal by hand, then assemble these slivers into larger-than-life paper installations and fashionable bonnets for clients. This 9-foot bloom and 2.6-foot floral bonnet is a personal project which took me over 60 hours to complete.

Said : My goal is always to create something unique that sparks joy. Now more than ever, in the midst of the pandemic, racial tensions and political anxieties, I needed to take a break to celebrate self-love and creativity. Special thanks to my collaborators! My friend, our “flower child”, exudes black-girl-magic, and her fiance, photographer SubitoShots, does a fantastic job of capturing her and the vibrant details.

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Paper Quilling - Use Paper Quilling Technique Into Art Pieces

Paper Quilling - artist from the UK Use Paper Quilling Technique has spent the last 5 years to Create this Art Master Pieces 

45-year-old artist from the UK who has spent the last 5 years making my art Pieces from thousands of tiny strips of paper.

he have a keen interest in the natural world and the technique of on-edge quilling lends itself beautifully to hair, fur, and feathers, so I created an a-to-z of animals from the air, land, and sea to showcase the different textures that can be created. I try to make my paper animal pictures look as real as possible with only the on-edge technique.

Quilling or paper filigree is an art form that involves the use of strips of paper that are rolled, shaped, and glued together to create decorative designs. The paper is rolled, looped, curled, twisted and otherwise manipulated to create shapes which also make up designs to decorate greetings cards, pictures, boxes, eggs, and to make models, jewelry, mobiles etc.

Monday, August 31, 2020

Embroidery Hand-Stitch Landscapes Designs | Hand Embroidery Designs

Embroidery Hand-Stitch Landscapes Designs | HandMade Embroidery Scenery Designs 

Hand Embroidery is the craft of decorating fabric or other materials using a needle to apply thread or yarn. Embroidery may also incorporate other materials such as pearls, beads, quills, and sequins. In modern days, embroidery is usually seen on caps, hats, coats, blankets, dress shirts, denim, dresses, stockings, and golf shirts. Embroidery is available with a wide variety of thread or yarn color.

Some of the basic techniques or stitches of the earliest embroidery are chain stitch, buttonhole or blanket stitch, running stitch, satin stitch, cross stitch. Those stitches remain the fundamental techniques of hand embroidery today.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Making Art with Recycled Plastic Waste to Bring Awareness

Here are some Making artworks created purely from our plastic waste to raise awareness for single-use plastic pollution.

Most conventional plastic crap is made from non-biodegradable petrochemicals—instead of decomposing over time, it simply breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces (micro-plastics).

Since the 1950’s, plastic has become a popular material in the world: used in endless ways, found in countless items, and often made to be discarded and disregarded in mere minutes.

Since the majority of plastic is non-biodegradable, plastic waste has only accumulated over time, affecting our physical health and environment. In an effort to bring awareness to this issue and to keep some plastic from going into landfills or the ocean, I make art from plastic waste. What can we do to make a change?

Spread awareness, be mindful of plastic consumption, demand more plastic be made biodegradable—buying only plastic items that are. Be creative about making a change!

Monday, August 24, 2020

Paper Cutouts in Perspective | Turn Famous Landmarks Into Art

Paper Cutouts in Perspective | Rich McCor Artist Turn Famous Landmarks Into Art 

Londoner Rich 'Paperboyo' McCor (previously here and here) has already transformed Paris's Arc de Triomphe into a LEGO man and turned London's 02/Millennium Dome into a delicious-looking cake. Luckily for us, McCor is still on the go and he isn't running out of ideas - the photographer is back with more famous landmarks interacting with his whimsical paper cutouts!

An imaginative Instagram user’s unique way of capturing the world’s most famous landmarks for posterity involves a scissors, paper and a camera.

Positioning the various paper cut-outs takes much precision and no doubt McCor attracts a certain amount of attention during the process. No doubt there’s a certain degree of trail-and-error as well: what works well in one’s imagination doesn’t always pan out in reality. When everything goes right, well, that’s just the cherry on the sundae!

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

New Haircut Designs for Men


New Haircut Designs for Men | created by Truong Xuan Tuan, a young hairstylist from Hanoi, in Vietnam 

Truong Xuan Tuan uses simple tools like trimmers and razors to create detailed works of arts on the backs of his clients’ heads.

The 30-year-old has been working as a hairstylist for 10 years now, and started experimenting with various designs half a decade ago. He first made news headlines in 2018, after photos of one of his works, an image of Portuguese soccer striker Cristiano Ronaldo went viral online. He originally started with portraits of popular Vietnamese TV series characters and as word of his skills started spreading and more clients requested his signature hair portraits, he started working on a portfolio of designs.

Monday, July 27, 2020

Graffiti And Street Art in South Africa | African Graffiti Street Art

Graffiti And Street Art in South Africa | African Graffiti Street Art Into Open-Air Galleries 

Urban artist Falco One brings life and color to the streets of South African towns. After thirty-two years as a graffiti artist, Falco has played a significant role in the development of South Africa’s graffiti scene by leaving his marks on lonely walls. The artist’s awe-inspiring murals often resemble local wildlife which also cleverly interacts with various elements of the buildings, such as windows, pipes, or air conditioners.

In 2010, Falco started a project called “Once Upon A Town,” where he painted his way across South Africa, turning poor neighborhoods into open-air galleries that attract tourists. Vivid elephants in all shapes and forms are his most common and recognizable artworks. Scroll down to check his most incredible spray-painted creations!

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Slinkachu Makes His Mini Miniature People | Small Tiny People


Miniature People on the Streets of Cities Around the World 

Slinkachu (b. 1979, Devon, UK) has been “abandoning” his miniature people on the streets of cities around the world since 2006. His work embodies elements of street art, sculpture, installation art and photography and has been exhibited in galleries and museums globally. His images have been collected in three best-selling art books; Little People in the City (Boxtree, 2009), Big Bad City (Lebowski, 2010) and Global Model Village (Boxtree, 2012) that have collectively sold over 300,000 copies worldwide.

started working with miniatures in 2006. My work involves remodelling and painting of miniature model train set characters, which I then place and leave on the street. It is both sculpture, street art installation and photography. The street-based side of my work plays with the notion of surprise and I aim to encourage city-dwellers to be more aware of their surroundings. The scenes I set up, more evident through the photography and the titles I give these scenes, aim to reflect the loneliness and melancholy of living in a big city; the universal sense of being overlooked, lost and overwhelmed. But along side this there is always some humour in my works. The modern world can be a preposterous place to live and I encourage empathy with the tiny people struggling to get by.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Taxidermist Artist Made With Deer Butts

Taxidermist Artist Made With Deer Butts 

Taxidermy is the art of preserving an animal's body via mounting (over an armature) or stuffing, for the purpose of display, study, or home interior design. the process of preserving the animal, but the word is also used to describe the end product, which is called taxidermy mounts or referred to simply as "taxidermy".

A person who practices taxidermy is called a taxidermist. They may practice professionally. A taxidermist is aided by familiarity with anatomy, sculpture, painting, and tanning. English ornithologist John Hancock is considered to be the father of modern taxidermy.

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Drunken Crab | Couple Builds A Mini Pub In A Garden


The Drunken Crab | Couple Plans to get a Mini Pub Built in their Garden 

The Most creative solution came to the Crabs family, who realized they needed to get a pub built in their garden.

After consulting with Amy, who is the mastermind behind Octavia Chic, and her husband plans to create a garden pub were made. It took around three weeks for Amy and her husband to complete this project and the result took people’s breath away. Once the finished project appeared on the Octavia Chic.

it looks great both from the outside and from the inside!

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Harry Potter Themed House Villa At Orlando Florida


Owned by Loma Homes translated the magic of "Harry Potter" into an epic new rental just 30 minutes away from The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando.
The Wizard's Way villa has eight themed bedrooms with 10 beds, five bathrooms, and dozens of book and movie Easter eggs that fans of the franchise will love.
Surrounded by brick walls with half of Harry's trolley sticking out of them (complete with his owl, Hedwig), the bed in this room is made to look like the front of the Hogwarts Express.
According to the listing, the smokestack actually smokes and whistles.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

How to make a Halloween Pumpkin Cannibal | Pumpkin Carving

How to make a Halloween Pumpkin Cannibal

Monday, May 24, 2010

11 Extraordinary Origami Artworks

No other art form involves mathematics as intrinsically as origami. Nor is any other community of art quite as dependent on the contributions of its members. Every new folding or design technique brings a slew of possibilities. "The process of designing origami figures is cumulative—one uses new techniques, refines old ideas, and one really can’t say that a particular figure is finished until it’s actually folded," says artist Robert J. Lang. Below, see 11 finished products, all of which represent a beautiful blending of talent, technique and science.



"Cocker"


French artist Eric Joisel designed and folded this dog in 2002 from a rectangular sheet of Canson fine art paper using the "wet-folded" technique invented by Japanese origami master Akira Yoshizawa.



"Goldfish"


In 2004, Joisel created this burnt-orange goldfish using a square-shaped blend of washi—a type of paper made in Japan from natural tree bark fibers—and sandwich foil.




"Dwarf N°3"


In 2004, Joisel created this dwarf violinist—demonstrating his fascination with J.R.R. Tolkien's work—from a blend of sandwich paper and foil.





"Ent"


Joisel recreated this fictional character based on the race of trees with humanlike qualities from The Lord of the Rings in 2004 from a blend of sandwich paper and foil.



"Stag Beetle BP" (Opus 477)


Known as one of the pioneers of the cross-disciplinary marriage of origami and mathematics, artist Robert J. Lang composed and folded this 5" arthropod using one uncut square of Origamido paper.




"Elephant" (Opus 111)


Lang created this sculpture, which is featured in his book The Complete Book of Origami, using one uncut square of kami paper.



"Allosaurus Skeleton" (Opus 326)


Lang created this 24" model—which, according to his website, was inspired by the late Issei Yoshino's Tyrannosaurus Rex—using 16 uncut squares of Wyndstone Marble (a.k.a. Elephant Hide) paper.




"3D Teapot"


Japanese artist Tomohiro Tachi folded this work, which was featured in the Siggraph 2007 Teapot Exhibit, using one piece of square paper, modeled after the Utah (or Newell) teapot, a mathematical model of an ordinary teapot.



"Leaf of Kajinoki"


Tachi designed this rendition of a mulberry leaf using Origamizer—a 3D origami design software that generates a crease pattern that folds into a given polyhedron, which Tachi developed himself.


"Camel"


Origami artist John Montroll—who invented the Dog Base and Insect Base folding techniques—developed this camel design in the 1980s, which was folded by German artist Sebastian Kirsch from a 30 cm square of foil-backed mulberry paper.




“Handshake”


This work was commissioned by the Aberdeen Asset Management Annual Report, for which artist Nick Robinson composed and folded several designs using newspaper in 2000. Each hand was created using one sheet of paper.