Toshio Shibata
Kawachi Town, 1998, gelatin silver print, 44¾ x 36 inches
Kuroiso City, 1989, gelatin silver print, 38 x 47.6 inches
Elkhead...
Mutation Of The Global Thinking - (Before, Now, After)
Photo : Tapissier
Paris, 2013
Patrick Laumond is a...
Industrial designers Ronan + Erwan Bouroullec are currently celebrating 15 years of creation with a retrospective...
Beacon Food Forest is a developing seven-acre food forest on Beacon Hill in Seattle. A forest. Of food. Learn more and help out.
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Collage . Cardboard . Ryan Sarah Murphy
These are selections from Whitfield Lovell’s ”Kin” series. Lovell is a NY born artist and MacArthur Genius award winner...
Patti Smith: punk poet queen
She was the angry, androgynous runaway who got chatted up by Allen Ginsberg and had a grand affair with Robert...
5 posts tagged Guide
Deanna Halsall | Deanna Halsall is an illustrator based in Manchester, UK. Her client list includes Bonbonkakku, the British Science Council, Galison NYC, Glug London, Howies, Hung Drawn Quartered, John Brown Publishing, Love Creative, NBC America, Port Street and The Eden Project. The images above are from An Uncle’s Guide To London-a guide full of great things to do with young children around London illustrated for Herb Lester. I love the concept of this guide, the clean illustrative line and variety of the symbolic buildings and transportation options are fantastic combined with a lovely cold color pallet.
We see no need to hide from the fact that days out with children in London can be hard work, no matter how much you may care for your pint-sized companions. In this guide we have hand-picked 29 places which should be diverting to young and old. There’s bowling, boating, aeroplanes, swimming, dinosaurs, trench warfare and chickens. We cannot guarantee a good time will be had by all, but we are quietly confident.
Have a look at more of Deanna’s works here.
An Interactive Guide to Kyoto’s Nishiki Market | Mochi jellies with matcha
AWOL - Dan Cottrell via Graphisme
AWOL is a guide to getting lost, encouraging exploration and an increased awareness of your surroundings through a series of algorithmic walks. You won’t know exactly where you are going but will always return to your starting point, so you can enjoy the new surroundings and experiences without the anxiety that often comes with being lost.
You may recognise this David Koma for Topshop dress from ‘Faking It’ in Issue One. It is currently in the sale for £175 but if you follow our step-by-step guide for how to create your own version, you can have it for a fraction of that price!
Faking It is a regular feature which shows you how to recreate key designer pieces on a non-designer budget. Keep your eyes peeled for the latest Faking It in Issue Two.
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