Jan Wöllert and Jörg Miedza, from Bremen, Germany, are the creators of these amazing light paintings. Light painting, also known as light drawing or light graffiti is a photographic technique in which exposures are made usually at night or in a darkened room by moving a hand-held light source or by moving the camera
Kayleigh Doughty The artists shown in the Pop Life exhibition at the Tate modern inspired this Tee entitled “Pop Life Deserves A Toast! ”. Pop icons such as Keith Haring and Takashi Murakami’s displays influenced the customization and colour, along with the well-known halftone pattern technique that is found displayed throughout Roy Lichtenstein’s work. The toasters symbolize the everyday consumer product, along with the toast that pops up representing the energy and lifestyle of Pop Art that we all know and love.
It looks like a normal photo with a guy sitting down reading a newspaper and two others walking on the sidewalk. If the image is rotated -90 degrees, you’ll see that it is an illusion.
Provoking street campaign which can be seen right now in Melbourne for the Australian Childhood Foundation. For their ongoing campaign Stop Child Abuse Now agency JWT used child size mannequins to represent children suffering neglect. The mannequins were placed in high traffic locations around the city and then a billposter was pasted over the top of the figure so only the feet and legs could be seen. Words on the poster read, “Neglected Children are made to feel invisible.”
Divorce is not traditionally a reason to party, but these hilarious cakes provide a fun and humorous way to celebrate new beginnings. http://www.pinkrosecakes.co.uk
Billboards built around actual electric wires and poles to amusingly yet convincingly dramatize the need for the panasonic nose hair trimmer’s safety cutting system.
LA-based Chris Roth uses classic stained glass techniques to mix modern portraits of cultural icons like Spiderman with religious imagery. We simply can’t get our eyes off the Virgin Mary hanging out with hip-hop’s Jewish rappers, the Beastie Boys.
Camouflage Posters by Fred Lebain After visiting New York for the first time and taking some pictures, Fred Lebain returned for a second visit with large poster prints and aligned them with their original locations
One of the first typographic experiments of Autobahn is Tapewriter: a font basing its form to the grid of a football cage. The width of a roll of duct tape, the ‘writing material’, matches the space between two bars of such a cage construction perfectly. The idea behind the font is that anyone who is in possession of a roll of tape, can submit his or her message to the world. Tapewriter clearly demonstrates you can write with anything and any surface can be a sheet.
Tapewriter is developed during a HKU seminar of Richard van de Laken and Eric Wie and was later worked out into a type specimen. In this specimen a lot of photos of the font production and surroundings were added deliberately: it shows the creativity and fun of writing with tape.