The surprising pattern behind color names around the world
Posted: July 21st, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Design, Really Cool Stuff | Tags: color names, graphic design, ink, pantone colors, print | No Comments »Why the Wingdings font exists
Posted: June 8th, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Really Cool Stuff | Tags: computer fonts, cool fonts, design fonts, fonts, wingdings | No Comments »Keeping the Japanese Art of Candy Sculpting Alive
Posted: June 8th, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Really Cool Stuff | Tags: art, artwork, candy art, candy artwork, japanese, sculpting | No Comments »Jurassic Park – Pushing The Limits of Visual Effects
Posted: April 29th, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Really Cool Stuff | Tags: Jurassic Park, special effects, video effects | No Comments »This Documentary reveals Graphic Design before Computers made it Easy
Posted: January 19th, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Design, Printing, Really Cool Stuff | No Comments »The rapid upheaval of the graphic design industry from the 1950s to the 1990s was monumental. Introduction of the desktop computer revolutionised paste-up boards in studios to PDFs on laptops.
Graphic Means (Official Trailer) from Briar Levit on Vimeo.
Please Touch the Art
Posted: January 19th, 2017 | Author: admin | Filed under: Really Cool Stuff | No Comments »Please Touch the Art from Cantor Fine Art on Vimeo.
Art Space Design T-shirt Shop — Save 29%
Posted: December 7th, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Design, Printing, Really Cool Stuff | No Comments »Art Space just launched a great line of fun t-shirts, check them out.
Save 29% using this coupon code: ZSEASONSENDS
Artist Asks Strangers to Draw a Bicycle From Memory… Then 3D Renders The Results
Posted: October 28th, 2016 | Author: admin | Filed under: Design, Really Cool Stuff | Tags: 3d, bicycle drawings, bike design | No Comments »Bicycle Drawings Reimagined In 3D
Do you know what a bicycle looks like? Of course you do. At least you think you do. You’re pretty sure; there’s a couple of wheels, a couple of tubes, some handlebars… on second thought, bicycle drawings are hard.
Do you really know what a bicycle looks like? Could you draw the perfect mountain bike, BMX or a road bike completely from memory? You might think so, but if Italian artist Gianluca Gimini’s genius latest project is anything to go by, there’s a good chance you’re wrong.
Gianluca is an art director, photographer and product designer based in Bologna in Italy. Back in 2009 he ran a project called ‘Velocipedia’; where he would ask people bicycle drawings produced completely from memory and then 3D render the results.