Showing posts with label artisan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artisan. Show all posts

Sunday, April 25, 2010

darcy miro: jewelry treasures




Darcy Miro's jewelry creations are created using casting methods with sterling silver or 18-karat gold.

Her pieces emerge from wax casts made from found materials, showing jagged surfaces, erosion, decomposition and decay. Each cuff resembles fragments of a tiny terrain, ocean reefs & shells washed up on the sand.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

botany factory terrariums: kate goldman macdonald








Botany Factory is a San Francisco based studio whose mission is to bring greenery to small, indoor spaces. Much like creating a ship in a bottle, terrarium building takes a small, dexterous hand, a collection of minute tools and a keen interest in petite plant life and clever composition.

A plant enthusiast from the start, Katie Goldman Macdonald began her early days accompanying her banjo playing, botanist father on wildflower classification walks through the woods. Ever after, she has nurtured a growing desire to have dirt on her hands and flowers in her hair. She is the creator, designer and owner of Botany Factory. She works with Oakland based glass artist, Evan Kolker, to have her designs brought to life. All of her hand blown forms are organically shaped, playful and one of a kind.

Katie is obsessed with succulents and has turned her apartment into a living, breathing life sized terrarium. She likes nothing better than to pore over her succulent and cactus encyclopedia researching which specimens she will next seek out. Straight from her little Mission based studio to you, her creations are the perfect way to bring a little of the great outdoors inside.

Friday, April 9, 2010

thaddeus wolfe: ceramic vases




Gorgeous vases by Cleveland Institute of Art graduate, Thaddeus Wolfe. Wolfe is inspired by science and the crystalline structure of all matter. He says, “Underlying and unperceived, on a molecular level there is a structure to all organic matter.”
available at, funny enough: Matter

Monday, March 15, 2010

frida kahlo: haute art







These paintings from Frida Kahlo (career of 1926 until her death in 1954) show vivid colors, realistic details and her signature complex symbolism relating to specific incidents in her life. My favorite being her personified shot down deer, a brilliant representation of her emotional state.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

kirkland museum: denver colorado





The Kirkland Museum of Denver has a nationally important display of 20th-century decorative arts, with more than 3,300 works on view of Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau, Glasgow Style, Wiener Werkstätte, De Stijl, Bauhaus, Art Deco, Modern and Pop Art.

A major survey of Colorado art history is documented, with over 170 artists represented by more than 700 works. Most importantly the museum shows a retrospective of Colorado's distinguished painter, Vance Kirkland (1904-1981). The museum was Mr. Kirklands original home and studio. Do not miss a visit to it if you are in the Denver area.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Monday, January 25, 2010

inframe tv: documentary shorts


InFrame.tv is a documentary based vodcast produced in Melbourne, Australia profiling & explore original Australian and international talent working in art, design and culture. InFrame offers thoughts, insights, and inspirations of people who create. InFrame

Thursday, January 21, 2010

rug rag: thick flotaki wool rugs


Handmade with heavy dense New Zealand Wool, in a wide array of sizes, shapes, colors and and designs. Rug Rags

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

this into that: jim rosenau: berkeley california

This Into That
Jim Rosenau was raised in a house with 5,000 books. He has been making and selling thematic bookshelves from vintage books since 2002. The idea occurred to him years earlier after reading an essay, "Books As Furniture," by Nicholson Baker. Given his background as the son and grandson of publishers, he assumed the reaction, should he make such a thing, would be furious. The work, once underway, proved him wrong. So wrong in fact books as shelves is now a popular DIY project.