via UPPERCASE - journal - Walls of Art and Commerce
Supermarket Sarah is a interesting concept for a webstore. Sarah and other collaborating artists create walls—large-scale still life arrangements—of products for sale. You click on the item that interests you to purchase. The wall above features work by Manchester-based artist Tasha Whittle.
Art Design People - BLESS Nº40 Whatwasitagain « blog.arcademi.com
“…the workoutcomputer
the workoutcomputer is our ultimate dream tool for every day office work, facing finally the problem of balancing mental and physical fatigue equally, means after a long office day you risk muscleaching the next day, or you are in such a good working shape that you get addicted….
More seriously we see it as a good test to touch new ground in combining work and leasure time in a use- and playful way and who wouldn’t have dreamt to step on a dot, to hammer an explanation mark and to kick a question mark into an e-mail ?…”
iamacrossword:
darthvaderr:
Anne Hathaway
hn, lust
I don’t lust for her, just the hair.
This photo sends me into some narcisstic jedi knight zone of wanting waves and waves of shiny brunette hair to the best of my humanoid ability to want and pursue something. Like - I would abduct your 1st born child - just to have enough waves of brunette hair to form a winter capelet composed entirely of my own dead human follicular material!
I also like the human to other mammals connection of merging her hair with the hair lustre of the not present animal, that was shorn for hir also shiny brunette follicural material.
Honestly, I don’t know what’s gotten into me. I like shiny hair and fuzzy jumpers in equal measure, but something about the sexual fetishization of dead skin cells here freaked me. Biological science is totally a wet blanket to much sexual media imagery. That is all.
Super Prosthetics Project
The Super Prosthetics Project is about exploring armwear as an object of empowerment, choice and identity. The purpose is to conduct a series of creative experiments to challenge current ideas of prosthetics and explore what a wearer might choose to create in that space if he/she could have any functionality or aesthetic. It is hoped that the project will culminate in a series of exciting objects that will allow a wearer to do or experience something extra-ordinary.
The project is being conducted at the Royal Collage of Art in London by Becky Pilditch and with the help of Holly Franklin. It has developed in conversation with individuals who wear and make prosthetics limbs and the blog has been created to make the process visible for those who wish to share ideas and continue dialogue on the subject. Check out the blog and feel free to comment on the material. Becky and I would love to hear your thoughts.
via Holly Franklin
ellen crimie-trent fabrics via print & pattern
Just got approved for an unexpected day off tommorrow. I have some study and volunteering stuff to catch up on, but otherwise, a day off = a fabric sourcing day!