by mer-ow
An embroidery I’ve been abandoning and coming back to when I have time, started it during my winter break….
Love bird pigeons! In the end I’ll probably will put banners around the avian couple with some silly words…
I’m Kjersti, see more of my art and embroideries here!
PS I sometimes sell embroideries on ETSY!
This reminds me of some jerks I know!
“Shintaro Ohata just finished up a solo exhibition at the Yukari Art Contemprary in Tokyo, Japan. This Hiroshima, Japan-born artist is known for his ability to show us everyday life in a cinematic way…He places sculptures in front of paintings! Combining 2D with 3D, he’s an emerging young artist who’s definitely one to watch.”
These make me feel feelings.
tj:
(by sarahphisher)
This made me LOL. I’d totally hump in the guest room just to spite it.
I’m glad to know Lindsay doesn’t expect her guests to abide by such a puritanical rule.
Nobody is allowed to hump in any room of my apartment, ever. Including (apparently) me.
(by sarahphisher)
This made me LOL. I’d totally hump in the guest room just to spite it.
“After six months held by the Nazis in a prisoner of war camp, Major Alexis Casdagli was handed a piece of canvas by a fellow inmate. Pinching red and blue thread from a disintegrating pullover belonging to an elderly Cretan general, Casdagli passed the long hours in captivity by painstakingly creating a sampler in cross-stitch. Around decorative swastikas and a banal inscription saying he completed his work in December 1941, the British officer stitched a border of irregular dots and dashes. Over the next four years his work was displayed at the four camps in Germany where he was imprisoned, and his Nazi captors never once deciphered the messages threaded in Morse code: ‘God Save the King’ and ‘Fuck Hitler’.”
This is…amazing.
The original Subversive Cross Stitch.
My crochet Jake the Dog from Adventure Time scarf on Etsy http://www.etsy.com/listing/88000446/crochet-jake-the-dog-from-adventure-time
Ohhhhhh, Burrrrrrjiiiiiiitttttt.
Dan Collier
Typographic Links, 2007
A hand-sewn, three-dimensional hyperlink structure that guides the reader through the pages of a book (above); detail (right)
Awesome.