Showing posts with label handcraft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handcraft. Show all posts

Saturday, September 1, 2018

A Japanese Artist Crafts Portraits of Cats with Realistic Glass Eyes and Felted Wool

Japanese artist Wakuneco makes incredibly realistic portraits of feline heads, handcrafting the three-dimensional creations out of felted wool. Making such lifelike cat faces has supplied Wakuneco with quite fame on Youtube, where she uploads how-to videos that lead her audience through the process of attaching cats‘ fur to absolutely procuring each subject’s miniature whiskers. She pulls inspiration from pictures of real cats for her unique pieces, which range in breed, color, and dimensions. She’s her sculpture objects on Yahoo! Auctions, but currently only ships within Japan. You can view more of Wakuneco’s pieces on Instagram and Twitter.

H/T Laughing Squid

The post A Japanese Artist Crafts Portraits of Cats with Realistic Glass Eyes and Felted Wool appeared first on FREEYORK.

Monday, February 19, 2018

A Designer Cooperates With Aboriginal Craftspeople to Create Eco-Friendly Lamp Shades

In reaction to this plastic waste issue in the Colombian Amazon, Spanish designer Alvaro Catalán de Ocón began the PET Lamp Project in 2011–a layout venture with the intention to reuse PET plastic bottles. Over the previous five years, the eco-conscious designer has worked together with traditional craft communities from throughout the world–including Colombia, Chile, Japan, and Ethiopia–to turn plastic waste into a growing collection of beautiful, handmade PET Lamps.

As with his previous projects alongside traditional craftspeople, Catalán de Ocón came to Bula’Bula Arts Centre in Ramingining with no predetermined plan for the way the lamps would look. Rather, he gave liberty to the talented weavers who began to generate huge structures inspired by traditional Yolngu mats. Made from naturally colored pandanus fibers, the resulting suspension lamps with feature fringes include the PET plastic bottles since the center points of their circular woven designs.

The vivid, sunshine hues were created from boiling natural ingredients and pigments–such as ash and eucalyptus bark– then leaving the dyed leaves to dry from the sun. Every single mat was then woven together into two bigger lampshades, mirroring the bond between individuals of the same clan. Catalán de Ocón explains, “The two masterpieces turn into a complex, harmonious merge between Aboriginal kinships, weaving technique, topographic elements, and design.”

You can also find out more about the job via the PET Lamp Site.

In collaboration with traditional craftspeople from all over the planet, the PET Lamp Project was set by designer Alvaro Catalán de Ocón.

h/t Colossal

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Russian Artist Engraves Unbelievably Intricate Gold Bug inside of a Coin

Russian artist Roman Booteen is a modern master in the art of this hobo nickel–a term used to refer to the 18th-century sculptural artwork type of hand-engraving coins. His latest extraordinary bit–branded Gold Bug–has been motivated by Edgar Allan Poe‘s short story, The Gold Bug. It features a fundamental beetle motif with a tailored mechanism which allows its wings to start and close, revealing and concealing its own 22K golden body.

Carved from two Morgan dollar coins from 1921 plus a five dollar gold coin out of 2015, the mechanism may be employed by pushing a “button” on the coin’s leading edge. Inspired by fancy florals, ribbons, and skulls, the Latin script approximately translates to: “The priciest should be something which was sought longer and intensively than others.” Booteen explains that the coin is a “sign of treasure hunting,” that is the theme in Poe’s narrative. The letter “L” on the insect’s body means “50” in Latin, which suggests Booten’s 50th coin carving.

As of posting, the coin has obtained almost 40 bids and is currently valued at $3,100.

h/t: [Reddit]