31.1.12

An everyday splash of neon - Scholten&Baijings for HAY

Loving these tea towels Scholten&Baijings designed for Danish company HAY.

Cold Forest tea towel set - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY


The Dutch design duo teamed up with HAY a few years ago and designed several brightly coloured series for the company. 

And although the larger interior pieces are great...
(as you can see:)


Colour Carpet - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY

Dot Carpet - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY
Colour block Collection - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY
...I absolutely Love the tea towels, because the colours are even brighter and they are so reasonably priced. The tea towel sets come in several variations:
Kitchen Tiles tea towel set - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY

Hanging Grid tea towel set - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY

Gradient tea towel set - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY

Box tea towel set - Scholten&Baijings for HAY
photograph courtesy of HAY



You can order the sets on-line at Hayshop.dk.
(they make great gifts!)

 Thanks for the present, T!

30.1.12

Yellow: Anke Roder

Loving this:

Anke Roder - 'Zicht op Ameland' - 2011
81 x 121 cm - encaustic and oil painting on wood panel 

Loving it a LOT.
I'm guessing it's because of the colours (the YELLOW).
Or the never-ending horizon.
Or the thickness of the wax and paint.
You'd have to see the painting in real life for the last part.



You can.
(but hurry)
The exhibition 'Change of light' by Anke Roder will be on view at the Jan van Hoof Gallery in 's Hertogenbosch (NL) until February 5th.

27.1.12

Since we're on the topic of low-tech...

I know. We weren't really (on the topic of low-tech).
But I am.

Somehow I collected quite some low-tech classics lately.

It started with an old Bakelite telephone, a black Ericssons model from the early sixties. You probably know the kind, it's your quintessential telephone with rotary dial and a heavy receiver.
Since our land line is digital, T. bought an easy analog-digital decoder at a hardware store to make the phone operational for incoming calls.

A few weeks later I bought an old Technics Quartz gramophone at a local thrift-store. We had to order a new stylus on-line, which cost us more than the actual record-player did. But now we can enjoy listening to old records, and -more importantly- we can now shamelessly collect and display all those magnificent vintage record covers (before, it would've been just plain silly).

And yesterday I received ....

*drum-roll*

.... My very own Brother Deluxe 850TR portable typewriter!

Here she is, my beauty:


I didn't realize it when I bought the typewriter on-line at 'Marktplaats' (a kind of Dutch Craigslist), but this typewriter has an 'Azerty'-keyboard. Most letters are where they usually are, but the A, Q, W, Z and M are differently placed, as are most of the punctuation marks. Another 'weird' thing is that the numbers are in the capital position, so you have to turn on caps lock or use shift to be able to type numbers. Also, there's no zero (0). I guess you're just supposed to use the letter O (come to think of it, this could also be a philosophical message about the non-existence of nothingness....).

Anyway.
Great feature on this machine is that you can type in both black and red. Wow! This must have been state-of-the-art at the time!
The thing I am most taken with however, is the little sad face that keeps staring at me from its position on the right-hand side of the keyboard.
Didn't notice it yet?
There you go:

Anyone want to give me a reason to use this typewriter?

26.1.12

Help me pick colours, the reward will be grand.

Al right, so I made this Tote that has 'Tralalalala' on it. It started out as something I did just for me, because I needed a handy linen bag I could use for groceries and stuff.

Since I made a stencil anyway and had some fabric-paint left-overs in several colours, I decided to make more bags, as gifts, and to -who knows- maybe sell.

As it turned out, the totes make a lot of people smile. And at €10,- a piece, many people don't think twice before ordering one. Great!

Right?

Well....
A short while back I made a new batch. It took me a lot longer than I remembered. Plus, since the left-overs of the fabric-paint were all used up, I had to buy new paint, which actually was quite costly.
While working, I started calculating the costs for these bags in my head and came to the sombre conclusion that I was making less money than I would earn in a sweat-shop in some parts of Asia.

Hmmm... OK.
Not the wisest business-model, apparently.

Time to turn it around:
The company from which I bought the linen totes in the first place, can actually print them for me as well. There is a catch, however: I'll have to order a large number of bags at once, and you pay a start-up fee for each colour you want to use.

I am now ready to invest and to have a batch of the Tralalala-bags made, but don't have the money to have them made in every colour. I'll have to invest wisely and choose the colours (I think I'll pick 2) that appeal to most people.

So help me out, friends!
Please comment on this post and tell me which colour you like most. (in rhyme, hell yeah)





Of course there's reward to be earned: everybody who leaves a comment with their favourite tralalalala-colour, will receive a 10% discount on the new Tralalalala bags.

Wait a minute!
That means you can get this happiness-inducing tote for only 9 euros!?!!
A grand reward indeed.

25.1.12

Layered colours


Playground in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

Photograph taken in the summer of 2008.
(when it was warm and sunny and not at all cold, cloudy and rainy like today)

24.1.12

Mesmerizing part II: Anne Ten Donkelaar

Another artist whose work was part of the ArtKitchen 'Wunderkammer' was Anne Ten Donkelaar.
I don't think the following photographs of her work need any text:

De draadspanner - reconstruction of a butterfly wing with thread and pins  - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl

Medusozoa - The antenna's form the parachute and the body forms a propeller - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl

Zwart vlek vlinder - two upper embroidered wings - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl


Goudraffeltje - broken butterfly wings are fixed with gold leaf - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl

Blauwe spinner - The body of this butterfly is made of thread - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl

Landkaart - The wings are partly made from maps where the butterfly originated - 2011
Photograph through anneten.nl

For more work of this artist, visit the Anne Ten Donkelaar Website.

23.1.12

Mesmerizing: Cedric Laquieze

This weekend I visited the 'Realisme' Art Fair in Amsterdam.
Since it was the first time I visited this fair, I wasn't sure what to expect.
To be honest, I had mentally prepared myself for an afternoon of gazing at still-lives and portraits. Beautiful of course, and inspiring, but probably not too exciting.

Man, was I mistaken.

At the fair I spotted a lot more than just very cleverly painted representations of real life. Don't get me wrong, I did see a lot of paintings that I mistook for photographs from a distance (from up close too, actually).
But there was so much more.

What was especially inspiring mesmerizing was the 'Wunderkammer' presentation of Gallery ArtKitchen. The Amsterdam based gallery displayed the work of -amongst others- Cedric Laquieze:

Photograph courtesy of ArtKitchen Gallery

Here is what Cedric says about his fairies on his own blog: “(the fairies)... were some of my first creations and the main theme of most of my exhibitions. They are made from insect parts, including grasshoppers, beetles and butterflies, bones and plants. I always like to think there is a root of truth behind every myth... And that there's not that much of a leap between fairies and insects, some of which offer amazing shapes and textures to work with.”


All photographs courtesy of ArtKitchen Gallery

Unfortunately these photographs don't even start to do justice to the exquisitely put together figurines.
Make sure you check Cedric Laquieze's blogspot or the website of ArtKitchen Gallery for more information about upcoming exhibitions you could visit.

20.1.12

The Silver Lining

Today is a very dreary day,

as was yesterday,

and tomorrow will probably not be that different.


January.

...



To make things better, I made an extra cloud, this one comes with a silver lining:

The Silver Lining - 2012 - silver plated chain, silver glass beads, hama beads

19.1.12

The bathtub I would buy a matching house for.

Amsterdam is a great city to live in.
A lot of people agree on that.
Awesome!
Or... wait a minute... not so great at all.

Because so many people want to live in a city that is not really big, finding an affordable spacious house is pretty much impossible.

Therefore many of us enjoy the comfort of a 'toilet and shower-closet', usually situated in the middle of an apartment with no natural light or ventilation whatsoever. The cramped space has 1 perk: being able to use the shower head makes cleaning the toilet a lot easier.

Although I am working hard to be able to move to a bigger house soon, I never really felt the need for a large bathroom. Until I saw this bathtub:


The bathtub is made of a marble (!) composite and has a handmade frame made of American white oak.
Designer Thomas Linssen, also living and working in Amsterdam, has taken the time to fine-tune this beauty. And you can clearly tell: every little detail has been tirelessly thought through without the bathtub becoming over-designed.
And all this design-goodness did not detract anything from its comfort, on the contrary: the shape was actually derived from the ergonomics of a chair: focused completely on the human body.


Photographs by Johannes van Assem

Unfortunately I have not yet been able to enjoy a bath in this special tub.
But I definitely will, once I've bought a house to match.

18.1.12

DIY Tutorial: 3-minute stamps

Stamps.
Gotta love them!

In every thrift-store I visit, I spend a lot of time browsing through the toy-department, hoping to find a box that says "My own print-shop" (with a lot of little rubber letter-stamps - thus far collected 5) or any other kind of stamp.

In Amsterdam we have a great specialized stamp-store I like to visit sometimes. Unfortunately the stamps in there are usually quite expensive, and I am always looking for something slightly different, which would mean I would have to get a stamp custom made (even more expensive).

So I decided to get some rubber erasers and carve my own stamps, like I did once when I was a kid.
There are DIY tutorials all over the web, and it should be quite easy to do.
Well... The erasers are still in their plastic seal.
Somehow I never got to it. Although easy, to me there is still a threshold when you need special equipment or sharp knives.

Instead I came up with this extremely easy breezy way to quickly fabricate your own stamps.

Here is what you'll need:
  • Small-tipped marker (or pen, or pencil, anything that will write on foam)
  • Piece of wood (I used old wooden beads, but you can use any piece that has one flat surface)
  • Pair of scissors
  • Sheet of rubber craft foam (get it cheaply at the kids craft department in all kinds of colours)
  • Glue (any kind, as long as it doesn't eat away the foam)
  • An ink-pad


You will have your own stamp in a few easy steps.
First, trace the outline of your base (in this case, the large wooden beads) on the foam.


Secondly, draw the shape you want your stamp to have within the outline. I like to draw it by hand, to give it a kind of robust feel, but you can always use a template. Either way, don't worry too much about getting it exactly right immediately, you can always fine-tune it while cutting.


So here is step 3: cut out the shape.
Once finished, look at the foam figure from the side you didn't draw on, so you can check its shape without being distracted by any lines.



Almost done: now all you have to do is glue the foam figure on your wooden base..



...And start stamping!


I got so excited about this easy way to make stamps, I made a whole batch...



...And stamped away!

As you can see, the shapes I used for these stamps are rather basic and small, which contributes highly to the fastness of the process.

With this technique you can actually create stamps as intricate as you like, on woodblocks as big as you like (make sure the flat surface is completely even).
For these larger stamps (that are too big for your inkpad), you can use a little paint-roller to ink. Make sure you use even pressure when stamping.
(you actually just created a very easy woodblock-print :-D)

17.1.12

Inspiration: White paper treasure

Last year I was doing an art-workshop in a school here in Amsterdam. The kids (aged 8 to 11) were both excited and a little reserved about what I would ask them to do.
They had no idea what to expect. Would I have them paint or maybe do clay modelling?

When I took out the material we were going to work with, several children could not constrain an outcry of disappointment.

White paper.

Honestly? The paper they would use to draw upon and print on and that was basically worthless?

Luckily almost every classroom has one of those digital black boards nowadays, so I could show them a few examples of what can be made out of 'ordinary' white paper.

Pretty soon the pictures I showed of Danish artist Peter Callesen's work got the room completely silent, except for some audible gasps of admiration.
Here are some projects I showed them:

Peter Callesen - Distant Wish
Photograph courtesy of petercallesen.com

Peter Callesen - Impenetrable Castle
Photograph courtesy of petercallesen.com

Peter Callesen - Looking Back
Photograph courtesy of petercallesen.com

Peter Callesen - White Window Web
Photograph courtesy of petercallesen.com

To have the kids start working on their own projects as soon as possible, I focussed on this one artist for the workshop. But boy, there's a lot of white paper treasure out there!
Look at this:

Jeff Nishinaka - Brooklyn Bridge
Photograph courtesy of jeffnishinaka.com

Brian Chan - Hissing Roach
Photograph by Brian Chan

Calvin Nicholls - Lion (Follet Collection)
Photograph courtesy of calvinnicholls.com

Stephanie Beck - Harbor
Photograph courtesy of stephaniebeck.org


Elsa Mora - Bee
Photograph by Elsa Mora

What I love the most about artists working with white paper, is that they show that to make art you do not need a whole lot of expensive materials. A sheet of paper, pair of scissors and some glue, that's all you need.
Well... and the ability to see the opportunity in a material as ordinary as white paper.

If you love paper art as much as I do, you will surely enjoy regularly checking the following Blogs:

Strictly Paper: "Highlighting the many creative uses of paper" - curated by Jasmine Wilson and Daniel Scheibel. (the Strictly paper Webshop sells great books about paper art)

Upon a Fold: "A little peek into the world of paper artistry" - based in Australia and curated by Justine and Matt. (also GREAT goodies for sale in the Upon a Fold Webshop)