Peintures translucides pour représenter les vagues de l'océan - Lia Melia Cambridge-based visual artist Lia Melia creates strikingly energetic paintings where curling and crashing ocean waves splash and splatter across the canvas. Having grown up near the sea, that is where artist Lia Melia continues to find her inspiration. "The seas moods can always express my deepest feelings," she explains. This Will Make You Fall In Love! Level 1 Congratulations! You leveled up, but you aren't logged in so we can't save your points. Login Sign Up Share13.4K Tweet168 Share112 Share7 Stumble3 Share13.7K
Miniature Art on Toilet Paper Rolls by Anastasia Elias “I cut the small paper shapes that I stick inside the toilet paper rolls. I use tweezers to manipulate the paper shapes. I select the paper of the same color as [ad300] the roll. It gives the illusion that the paper figures make part of the roll. Don’t try this at home You think that books are just for reading? It turns out that many people think different. Georgia Russell is from Scotland. She uses scalpel instead of a brush or a pen. Her creations look like some fairy-tale creatures. Your beautiful eyes on Photography Served Behance Served Sites Served is a collection of sites that showcase category specific content from Behance, the world's leading platform for creative professionals across all industries. View All Served Sites → photography Served
Lieux de tous les jours sous dessins ajourés - Shamekh Bluwi Shamekh Bluwi, an Ammam, Jordan-based illustrator and architect, is creating a striking series of photographs that feature paper cutouts of women whose dresses can become literally anything… Shamekh’s sketches are completed with the patterns and scenery he encounters in his everyday life — From beautiful tiles…
The Art of Negative Space. on the Behance Network Sign Up Log In The Art of Negative Space. Project Featured On: FREE Soccer Jersey Placecard « Crafting Creatures 26 Jan 2011 by Cee in by Cecelia, CRAFT, die cutting, Digital Die Cutter, Tutorial Tags: cricut, die cut template, free die cut, free dxf, free svg, make the cut, party favor box, pazzles, scal, silhouette, vinyl Since blogging about the soccer themed place cards made for my nephew’s baptism, I’ve been asked about them numerous times. I used an electronic die cutter (Silhouette) to cut them out, but there’s no reason why it can’t be done by hand. I’ve made a PDF with fillable name and number to print out.
Mysterious paper sculptures « Central Station Those of you who don’t keep up with Edinburgh’s literary world through Twitter may have missed the recent spate of mysterious paper sculptures appearing around the city. Guardian article, 3rd March 2011. One day in March, staff at the Scottish Poetry Library came across a wonderful creation, left anonymously on a table in the library. Carved from paper, mounted on a book and with a tag addressed to @byleaveswelive – the library’s Twitter account – reading: It started with your name @byleaveswelive and became a tree.… … We know that a library is so much more than a building full of books… a book is so much more than pages full of words.… This is for you in support of libraries, books, words, ideas….. a gesture (poetic maybe?) Next to the ‘poetree’ sat a paper egg lined with gold and a scatter of words which, when put together, make “A Trace of Wings” by Edwin Morgan.
ART BY JANE WALKER: How to Make Glass Marbles Click on image to see photos of a marble being made in "Make a Ribbon Core Marble". These instructions are free of charge for personal use only (see copyright below). PLEASE NOTE: I do not give lessons or demonstrations. I put together these instructions for making marbles using a Hot Head torch at the request of another marble-maker, Dee Snell. The Hot Head is the least expensive glass working torch, and is simple to use. One can make good quality marbles and other small glass items with this torch and some basic tools.