Illustrations of Sasha Baranovskaya
Gorgeous watercolours by Omsk, Russia-based young illustrator Sasha Baranovskaya (Instagram)
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Gorgeous watercolours by Omsk, Russia-based young illustrator Sasha Baranovskaya (Instagram)
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"Nestled amongst the vines of Victoria’s Yarra Valley, 35km northeast of the city is Hutch & Co. From its humble beginnings as the 1800s ironmongery store formally known as Hutchinson’s, the site was transformed into a modern restaurant by Melbourne Design Studio Biasol"
Photos: Ari Hatzis
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Photos: Ari Hatzis
London-based artist Grégoire A. Meyer creates flawless digital illustrations that evoke emotionally thoughtful reactions.
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Check the works of conceptual photographer Logan Zillmer playing with optic illusions
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Nigel Van Wieck is an American figurative painter who lives and works in New York.
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Rome-based Anna di Prospero travels a lot, and creates meaningful self-portraits blending herself into urban environments
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Artist Mike Winkelmann (beeple) has been making an illustration every day for eight years. As his website will tell you, he hasn't broken routine for 3,039 days—and over that time his illustrations and process have drastically evolved. In his most recent digital illustrations, he imagines dreamlike futuristic landscapes. via
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LA-based surrealistic artist Alexander Gardner (previously) did a lot of artworks since our last visit worth to admire on his personal website or Instagram
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“Take ‘Kiss’ Out” is a coffee cup lid designed by Korean designer Jang Woo-Seok. It features puckered lips and a nose – as much human face as a lid needs for a kiss. So smooch your cup first thing in the morning!Jang Woo-Seok is interested in graphic, industrial and furniture design. To him, the cup is a fun, yet functional design, a symbol of urban culture and fashion!
the taable is a multidisciplinary creative hub founded by Axel Oswith and Amanda Kusai, who have devoted themselves to art direction and photography, with works also at the intersection of art and design. Driven by passion for the visual culture, the taable are dedicated in transforming the ordinary to something much more with their witty and clever interpretations of everyday.
"Code Black is simultaneously a laboratory, a workshop and a hub for connoisseurs of the dark art and science of coffee. Its design delivers a stripped back, masculine, almost reverential ode to the coffee bean." Based in Melbourne, Code Black has a few spots spread over the city. All of them are designed by ZWEI Studio delivering epic craftsmanship with a sustainable twist.
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There is no need to introduce Steve McCurry known for his captivating "Afghan Girl". Just come through the works he has done and doing on stevemccurry.com depicting the beauty of our disappearing world.
P.s. Check The Atlas of Beauty, done by Michaela Noroc def inspired somehow by the body of McCurry's work
Shinji Nakaba is a Tokyo-based jewelry designer who’s been creating since 1974. Everything he makes is wearable, and Nakaba often uses unconventional materials to create his pieces. These intricately carved pearl skulls are an example of his exceptional work.
Designed by the young talent Anastassiya Leonova (NN Design Band), the snow collection gives us a simple solution to seating. With solid frames and soft textiles, the chairs shapes the body of people trying them out – creating the most comfortable seating position.
Saint-Petersburg based illustrator Vera Golets has picked selected artworks she did for various clients by a topic of sweets and food.
"The Russians were NASA’s chief rival during the space race, so it’s ironic that it took a young Russian named Max Lapteff to design a smart, speculative rebranding of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration logo. The mark pulls off a hat trick, referencing NASA’s illustrious past, nodding to its dreams of taking us to new planets, and ditching the dated features of the old logo." says Wired and this story seen ironically funny in all possible ways.
Moscow-based digital artist Alexandr Damie shows his best commercial works
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Russia-raised and Milan-based architect Victor Vasilev designed KUB (2010), a nearly invisible bathroom sink. The minimal design is available in two sizes and features a combination of marble and glass.
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In the modern age, with the advent of GPS in addition to the abundance of mass-produced globes and maps, the art of globe making has fallen by the wayside. Only two workshops in the world still make handcrafted globes; one of them is Bellerby & Co. Globemakers, a studio based in Stoke Newington, London.
Read more about the painstaking process on Bored Panda
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The guru of photography manipulations Steve McGhee. Let him say for himself: "My work reflects a personal interest in things human beings have little or no control over. We walk through life feeling like we’re indestructible, while in reality, we’re just the opposite. In the days and weeks following a major catastrophes,, people tend to reboot – we get shocked back into being human. That is to say, we react in an undeniably human way… whenever tragedy strikes in the world people come together to help those directly affected. It’s just too bad we have to be reminded that we’re human in such terrible ways."
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