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Tuesday 29 April 2014

The EDIBLE-Looking ASHTANUR PENCIL HOLDER…

THE EDIBLE-LOOKING ASHTANUR PENCIL/UTENSILS HOLDER BY Mohar & Mogilevsky

Ido mohar, a graduate at the industrial design department of Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem, Israel created this unique pencil holder, in collaboration with Baruch Mogilevsky, that if you didn’t know better, would try to eat it at first glance.





Ashtanur
A project about a memory from Jerusalem, the city that has its own language.
Ashtanur is an “oven bread” in arabic, and used as the common word for flat bread in Jerusalem.
By imitating the rolling procedure that is used to cover and contain local food, with some humor added, the “Ashtanur” transforms to a pencil\ utensils case.














“Ha-ofe” bakery. Agripas, Jerusalem


“Ha-ofe” bakery. Agripas, Jerusalem


For purchase please go here on Etsy

Baruch Mogilevsky | Mohar Design

Monday 28 April 2014

MOVABLE TYPOGRAPHIC BIKE RACKS

Bike racks tend to blend into the background of a city, hiding away in plain sight. What if they instead stood proud as representatives of a city’s personality and culture?



In 2008 musician and avid cyclist David Byrne created a series of bike racks installed across New York. From a high heeled shoe placed on a busy shopping street to a silent black pup calmly waiting outside, New Yorkers could lock their cycles to public art.

Four years on the artist has finally made his way to Brooklyn. Commissioned by the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Byrnes returns with typographic bicycle racks that embrace the city’s identity as home to the creative hip.

The “letters” of each rack are movable, meaning that they can be swapped out and moved around to spell different words. Unveiled on Tuesday 8/21 the first word Bryne chose to spell was “Pink Crown:”


Source

PEOPLE PIXEL ART

Craig Alan was born in 1971 in San Bernardino, California. Though he was always drawn to the artistic side of life, Craig’s creative luminance did not wholly shine until his family transferred to New Orleans in his youth. It was here that Craig’s capacity for detailed visual interpretation took root.



In this city by the sea, rich in its culture and outlets for creative expression, Craig began exploring his own ingenious impulses.

Craig’s earliest experimentation took the form of street portraiture, an endeavor that helped him perfect his flair for replicating the human figure and afforded the budding artist a sense of economic autonomy.

POST-IT NOTES MONSTER DRAWINGS

Talk about using your imagination! 

John Kenn, is a writer and director for television shows for kids and in his spare time, he draws monster drawings on post-it notes!  Yes, we said post-it notes.  Such details on such small bits of paper is incredible!

The following pics are enlarged to show the details!