Archive for February, 2011
Rainy day.
Published February 16, 2011 Day to day , Photography , shape & pattern , space-to-play Leave a CommentTags: Day to day, pattern, Photography, space-to-play, street
How to build a city.
Published February 15, 2011 architecture , design , shape & pattern , textiles 1 CommentTags: architecture, colour, design, illustration, pattern, shapes, textiles
Wrap yourselves up in love.
Published February 15, 2011 design , LINK , product , textiles , works Leave a CommentTags: design, furoshiki, Japanese, pattern, print, product, sustainable, textiles
Retna wall.
Published February 10, 2011 architecture , Day to day , design , shape & pattern Leave a CommentTags: architecture, Day to day, design, pattern, shapes, street
One of the things I kept from a magazine was this photo of a wall in a parking lot. I thought it was quite beautiful and found out more about it here. This work is by Retna as part of ‘Wallworks’ – a project inviting a select group of graffiti artists to create a series of murals in the parking lot of the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas in December 2010.
Little seeds.
Published February 10, 2011 Day to day , shape & pattern , works Leave a CommentTags: book, Day to day, design, drawing, pattern, space-to-play
Well, it’s been a while since I’ve posted something. I guess I’ve been pretty distracted by various other things – ongoing projects, clearing, reorganising, reviewing, school, impending arrival of a new baby and so on. Yesterday I was throwing out some old magazines and found a few things of interest which I cut out and stuck into my sketch book. Things that interest me but I can’t always pin-point why, so I stick them in my notebook for future reference. I realised how liberating it is having a ‘physical’ sketch book to make notes in, draw and stick things down. Unlike posting things on a blog, where the desire is to share and have a ‘conversation’ about something (with that underlying pressure of presenting things that you hope will also be of interest to other people), in my sketchbooks I have complete freedom, knowing that I will be the only one to look through them. Unfortunately I’m not as much of an avid sketchbooker as I used to be, in fact more often than not these days I almost entirely forget about them. But when I get the chance to look through and review my visual thought process – in between many pages that leave me wondering why – I can always find something to inspire me. Those little ideas, little experiments, little seeds of things to come.