Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts

Rifle Paper Co. Spring Collection

Local artist/illustrator Anna Bond of Rifle Paper Co. has just released her new spring stationery collection and it's fantastic as always!

Cigarette Ash Landscape

This brilliant piece by Chinese artist Yang Yongliang layers black and white photos of urban skylines to create a giant burning cigarette. Via Designboom.


Brilliant!

Architects Jun Inokuma and Yuri Naruse create paper from construction wood waste and form it into these little house-shaped pads of sticky notes, transforming the wood material into a functional, iconic representation of its original intended form. Genius! Via Swissmiss.



Porridge Papers

Not only do the fine folks at Lincoln, Nebraska studio Porridge Papers do some great letterpress work, they go the extra mile and create their own papers by hand from scratch!





Hiyoko Imai

Adorable paper illustration by Hiyoko Imai.




Elod Beregszaszi

Spectacular folded paper by Elod Beregszaszi. Via Paper Schmaper.




Wataru Ito

Japanese artist Wataru Ito spent four years carefully creating this incredibly intricate paper city and plans to burn it down when his current showing is over. His wish is to video the process and play it backwards in order to watch it rise from the ashes. Now that's what I call dedication. Via Juxtapoz.




Heike Weber

Enjoy the crazy-intricate installations and papercuts of German artist Heike Weber.





Ana Serrano

L.A. artist Ana Serrano utilizes a variety of mediums including drawing, collage, sculpture, and motion. My favorite part of her portfolio, however is her incredible paper sculpture.





Rob Ryan

The intricate paper cuts of Rob Ryan are simply phenomenal...and I'm not talking about scars resulting from playing with paper.




Welcome to Bomboland!

Italian illustrator Bombo! (AKA Maurizio Santucci) does some amazing things with paper.




I made a turkey out of paper once

Artist Jean Jullien is doing some nice work, I especially like the stuff he’s doing with paper, and he didn’t even have to trace his hand. It’s nice to see so many people using handmade processes to create things lately.