Elaborate book covers have been Aniko Kolesnikova’s passion since 2009. The Latvian designer-artist, working under the name Mandarin Duck, specializes in creating dragon-, animal-, bird-, fantasy-, and nature-inspired polymer journals. She occasionally takes custom orders, too.
Buenos Aires-based art director and digital artist Martín De Pasquale is called a Photoshop wizard by some, and not without reason – his masterful digital photo manipulations blur the boundaries between dreams and reality and between humor and fear. He even deals with the issues of life and death, mainly focusing on mortality and the vulnerability of human body.
Wait a second, are we about to be invaded and overrun by giant fluffy dogs? If these perfectly-timed photographs are anything to go by, then it appears it's already happening. Can you imagine a world ruled by mammoth pugs, St. Bernards taller than coastlines or an era where man's best-friend takes YOU for a walk?
Israeili artist Ronit Baranga (born in 1973) uses clay and porcelain to craft some really disturbing tableware that would probably instantly make you lose your appetite.
Scott Bisson is an glass artist based in Philomath, Oregon. The artist’s handmade, glass blown animal sculptures are amazing works of art and can be found in numerous galleries and homes around the world.
Italian artist Giulia Bernardelli takes spilt food & drink and creates amazing works of art, turning a disaster into something beautiful. Honey, ice cream & coffee are used to create intricate illustrations and portraits.
Artist George Redhawk creates animated artworks that will leave your mind in a spin, but there's something even more impressive about these artworks that you would never be able to guess, Redhawk is legally blind. In order to create these hypnotic and perfectly looped GIF's he uses image morphing software on his specialised computer setup.
Sarah Smith, the Oregon-based craftsman behind Modern Flower Child, makes hand-made tar wrist trinkets, bangles and studs by perpetually protecting genuine quills, blooms, seashells and other excellent odds and ends of nature in hard, perfectly clear resin.
San Francisco-based photographer Carey Fruth has set out to redefine what ‘American beauty’ is with a photo series of the same name that has women of all body types posing in romantic beds of flower petals. Fruth was inspired by a racy scene from the 1999 movie of the same name in which Kevin Spacey fantasized about one of his daughter’s friends.
With her wonderfully simple and playful sketches of various food items as fashionable dresses for runway models, fashion illustrator Gretchen Roehrs shows us just how closely related food and fashion can sometimes be. Art imitates life, as they say, and this holds true for food and fashion as well.