Monday, December 12, 2011

Funerary mask of Tutankhamen



Tutankhamun,1341BC–1323BC,was an Egyptian pharaoh of the 18th dynasty (ruled ca. 1333 BC – 1323 BC in the conventional chronology), during the period of Egyptian history known as the New Kingdom. His original name, Tutankhaten, means "Living Image of Aten", while Tutankhamun means "Living Image of Amun". In hieroglyphs, the name Tutankhamun was typically written Amen-tut-ankh, because of a scribal custom that placed a divine name at the beginning of a phrase to show appropriate reverence.He is possibly also the Nibhurrereya of the Amarna letters, and likely the 18th dynasty king Rathotis who, according to Manetho, an ancient historian, had reigned for nine years — a figure which conforms with Flavius Josephus's version of Manetho's Epitome.

The picture below is the Funerary mask of Tutankhamen that I made by Embroidery and Cross-stitch.That is a art project from my Art History class. From I decided to make the Funerary mask of Tutankhamen, I spend almost one month to do this work. However, until the project due day, I did not finish yet. It still has some part need to work on.





rainbow warrior



Stockholm-based street artist akay has created the 'rainbow warrior: tool no 05.1' which is part of his 'instruments of mass destruction (complicated technical solutions to aide in simple acts of vandalism) series', that includes the previous 'robo-rainbow: tool no 10'. for both of the 'art-making' tools, the individual attaches an implement to the back of his/her bicycle.

Where the 'robo-rainbow' employs a mechanical arm, swinging in an arch above the biker to paint the wall while stopped, the tagging process with the 'rainbow warrior' is further expedited. the 'rainbow warrior' has a simple structure that is attached to the back of a bike and once installed, stands vertically, misting the surface adjacent to the the biker with a spray-painted rainbow as they ride past.

 

Monday, December 5, 2011

How about this in your house?

This is Design, but it's just a little weird. They may good for Halloween.
How you feel if it in your home?




Pumpack

It’s quite the trend to have suitcases with an expandable hood to accommodate more clothes and stuff. However very few have stopped to consider vacuum packing clothes, to make more space. The Pumpack is one such suitcase design where it includes a pump that helps to compress clothes to make more packing room.


Monday, November 28, 2011

Magnetic life buoy



One of the biggest fears while evacuating a sinking ship is the possibility of survivors being carried away by the tide, and people getting lost at sea. The Network Tube is a rescue tube with magnetic properties and aims to form a floating cluster, bringing people together via GPS. When people huddle together, they not only boost each other’s morale, but they also increase their chances of survival.

Designers: Son Kijo, Joon Hyoung Seo, Uhm Hyung Woo, Choi JinYoung & Kim Junpyo

Where is the Camera?

Air Clicker by Yeon Su Kim

A unique design concept which eliminates all that superfluous crap in most of the camera. Stripping the idea down to two modules you wear on your fingers, one a Bluetooth-enabled camera lens (which sends your “pictures” directly to your smartphone) and the other a motion-sensitive shutter button for “clicking”. Simply curving your fingers would enable the video mode. Smile for the fingers!
If you want to click pictures, wear the camera band on your thumb and the shutter button on your forefinger and gesture to click a pic. To take videos, simply curve your fingers to mimic a video camera grip and shoot. The tension from the finger movement triggers the shutter button to operate.



The art of the paper

Paper is the most important thing in our life new. We almost use it every day. Did ever think about what else can do by the paper?

Let me show you some paper of the art.

1.Architectural Paper Sculptures by katsumi hayakawa

“floating city”


“traffic blue line”
 “permutation”by katsumi hayakawa, 2011
 

 2.Amazing Paper Sculptures

 
3.Art on Paper

Monday, November 21, 2011

Life-Saving Skirt

Evacuation Skirt Inflates into a Kayak
 
 
 
The Evacuation Skirt was inspired by the Katrina storms in New Orleans and serves and a regular flowy skirt, but inflates into a kayak to become a life saver in extreme weather conditions. When inflated, the Evacuation Skirt can hold a full-grown adult woman and allows users to float atop floods and lakes when needed, becoming a suit life saver in emergency situations. Designer Yael Mer, says he “wanted to raise the question of emergency and beauty and to explore whether they can meet each other.”

Friday, November 18, 2011

Fashion Design of plastic by TOMAAS

New York-based fashion & art photographer Tomaas’ Plastic Fantastic series of images has an overall sense of etherealness. The model is staged with various plastic items such as straws, tubing, platters, and bottles. The striking contrast of the black background with the cool lighting creates an edgy, dream-like theatrical element.




Monday, November 14, 2011

Nokia New Phone


This fish-shaped concept is a departure from the rectangular devices we gawk over these days, and gives us an peek at a future where smartphone design has evolved beyond limitation. The soul of HumanForm contains part nanotechnology, a flexible display, and kinetic interaction. Nokia bills the concept as "a visionary solution beyond touch screen and voice communication where technology becomes invisible and intuition takes over." If HumanForm ever becomes real, users can bend the transparent display to navigate around the social-network-oriented interface. Aside from the entire phone being touch screen, it would also have support for gestures. Browsing images could occur simply by twisting the phone or bending it backward to zoom in. HumanForm could also have an "electro tactile" enhanced display, which could, for example, give an image of rocks a bumpy feel. Be sure to check out some real-life images of a HumanForm mockup at Pocket-Lint.


Everything you know about smartphone design will change one day. 

Alternative Company Logos

Logos are around us anywhere in life. Logos are the special sign for people to remember. Did you ever think about what's different if change the logos a little bit? Let's see the changed logos.





 

Viktor Hertz is a Swedish freelance graphic designer with something of a sense of humor. Here, he takes some immediately recognizable company logos and twists them just a little to come up with something a little more forthright! 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Corner House


Anna Nakamura and Taiyo Jinno of Kyoto-based architecture firm Eastern Design Office have created another sharp structure with the On the Corner house. It’s a seven-unit rental apartment complex located in an mixed use residential/industrial area of Youkaichi, Japan. The lot, which is severely triangular, remained empty for some time, as the shape made it undesirable to builders and the city did not want to allocate funds to make it a green space. Looks like it was worth the wait.

The building is concrete, glass, and stone. Yes, the overall structure is triangular, but look — the façade is comprised of square components. The architects conceived the structure as a surreal “present” or “toy box,” and also liken it to “a fictional tip of a boat [that looks] as if it were escaping from town.” On a more practical note, each unit is made up of a living room, kitchen, two bedrooms and a bathroom. 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Look at this picture and think what made this picture?

    A. photograph
B. Crayon
  C. Printing
    D. Embroidere

The answer is hand embroidered, crewel wool and acrylic on linen.
American artist cayce zavaglia considers herself a painter, yet has difficulty considering her work of embroidered portraits as painting themselves. 
Her realistic impressions of people are executed using crewel embroidery wool, for which over time she has created a system of sewing threads in a sequence that gives the appearance of a particular color or tone - her method of 'mixing' colors. 
Threads are sewn in precise directions in order to mimic the way lines are layered in a typical drawing an allusion of depth, volume and form. throughout her series of work, the stitches have become tighter and more complex.





Saturday, November 5, 2011

No More Lost

Are you always looking for your key or others that you use often? You use them everyday, but cannot find them each time when you want them. Chu Wang Designed a key control called Finder. I think this will help to find your stuff.

Finder is a two-part RFID Locator comprising of the main terminal and tab stickers. Basically you are supposed to stick the tracking stickers to objects that you tend to misplace often, like keys, phone, wallet etc. Configure the sticker with the appropriate label on the main terminal and you are set to use it. When you look for something, just type the name and then you will find it.

 


 

Monday, October 31, 2011

happy halloween

How is everybody this weekend? Did you dress up fo some party? Did you have a fun?
Let me show you a video to make you remember this year's Halloween.

Happy Halloween for everyone!


Artists daito manabe and satoru higa of tokyo present a digital comprehension of halloween masks

Starwars V Startrek by German artist Lichtfaktor

Light writing is an up-and-coming form of stop motion animation in which still images captured using the technique known as light painting or light drawing are sequenced and so generate an optical illusion of movement for the observer. Pablo Picasso used this technique almost a century ago but it has hit our contemporary consciousness just recently, kicking off with an advertising campaign by an American telecommunications company four years ago.
(from www.kuriositas.com/)
  
 Starwars V Startrek by German artist Lichtfaktor

 

The special lamps

Today, I'll show you some special lamps. They will make you enjoy your life specially.

No.1: The Solar vertical lamp by Korean designers Yoon-Hui Kim and Eun-Kyung Kim

With the blinds closed during the day blocking the rays of the hot sun, little solar pads are being charged on the back of the blinds and once the sun goes down, your mood lighting shines.



No.2: The Sophia Lamp by BabaAkcja

This is a 2-in-one that lamp and storage, which is a new way of storing earrings. And when you put your earrings on the lamp, it become different. So even if you buy the same lamp with other, the earrings' lamp are different.


No.3 The piggy bank lamp

This lamp only turn on when you put money in.And time of the light depend on how much you put in.It's good for the kids save money, and also good for saving the Electricity in public.


No.4 DIY wood lamp

Making the lamp by yourself. When you buy this lamp, they just give you pieces of wood and the nails. You can chose different shapes and create your own special lamp.


  

Monday, October 24, 2011

Amazing Cinemagraphs by Jamie Beck and Kevin Burg

Today I will show you “more than a photo, but not quite a video” by the photographer Jamie Beck and visual designer Kevin Burg.

A Cinemagraph is an image that contains within itself a living moment that allows a glimpse of time to be experienced and preserved endlessly. 


Visual Graphics Artist Kevin Burg began experimenting with the .gif format in this style in 2009 but it wasn't until he partnered with photographer Jamie Beck to cover NYFW that Cinemagraphs were born. Marrying original content photography with the desire to communicate more to the viewer birthed the cinemagraph process. Starting in-camera, the artists take a traditional photograph and combine a living moment into the image through the isolated animation of multiple frames. To quote supermodel Coco Rocha "it's more than a photo but not quite a video". Beck and Burg named the process "Cinemagraphs" for their cinematic quality while maintaining at its soul the principles of traditional photography. Launched virally through social media platforms Twitter and Tumblr, both the style of imagery and terminology has become a class of its own. The creative duo are looking forward to exploring future display technologies for gallery settings as well as pushing this new art form and communication process as the best way to capture a moment in time or create a true living portrait in our digital age while embracing our need to communicate visually and share instantly.