This series of tableware would definitely be on my wishlist if I wasn't still skipping my way across the world every couple of years. David Shrigley, Turner prize nominated and Fourth Plinth commissioned British artist, designed his first ceramics collection for the Gallery at Sketch in London as part of the restaurant's program of artist collaborations. "I'm delighted to be working . . .
Sharing Bliss: Colour Your Walls
If you like monochromatic interiors and furnishings as much as I do, I believe that you’ll appreciate this recommendation. Melanie Mikecz, otherwise known as Two Ems, creates prints which would add a colourful pop to any wall, any room. HER STORY: Melanie Mikecz likes to consider herself a designer slash starving artist. So that means she only starves half the time (Just . . .
I Drew a Ship
3D ship? Look again. This anamorphic illusion is actually a skewed drawing on three sheets of flat paper. Ramon Bruin, you have some serious skills. via This is Colossal . . .
Jumping Art
That moment of time where the phrase runs true, and where something (or someone) feels so close, yet so far. That's probably how these cards felt in this situation: Japanese artist Yuki Matsueda is a recent graduate from the Tokyo University of the Arts and holds a PhD in design. Instead of deciding to take the ordinary route of using a flat canvas, he used his love for art to do something a . . .
Face the Wall
We all love street art. Real art, and not random tags on the wall spray painted with any colour they could find in the store, or nicked from their brother's stash. The ones that you randomly spot while walking down the street and make you stop and stare. Russian street artist Nikita Nomerz creates 'The Living Wall', an ongoing series that brings life to dilapidated buildings by painting strange . . .
Starbucks Art
This is what happens when you leave an artist in Starbucks with a pen in hand... Starbucks. Avid coffee-lovers always insist that the coffee there really isn't that great, but once the green and white logo is spotted, everyone always seems to pop in anyway. Through her illustrations, it is quite clear that Japanese artist Tomoko Shintani is quite the Starbucks fan. She managed to merge . . .