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In his series "Transform", Hungarian photographer Bence Bakonyi matched his models’ clothes to their surrounding in different locations...
You probably won't have a better chance to show off all your potential if it's not by designing a website for your own agency or web studio. It's time to push all those ideas and concepts forward. 95 inspiring Websites of Web Design Agencies.
Fresh, innovative, creative, minimalist ... What's your style? You probably won't have a better chance to show off all your potential if it's not by designing a website for your own agency or web studio. It's time to push all those ideas and concepts forward, those a client would never understand or that would probably end up spoiling in the end. Now you have no excuses, it's time to surprise your clients, your competitors, and why not, the world.
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New York City-based artist Shane Hope uses 3D printing to create complex and colorful layered paintings that look just like nano-molecular structures. Represented by the Winkleman Gallery, Hope’s work initially looks like chaos, but is actually a huge tapestry of interwoven pieces that form a beautiful piece of art.
The paintings push the limits of what is possible with low-cost 3-D printers in new and interesting ways, creating techniques that would be more at home with paint than plastic. To create these chaotic pieces, Hope keeps four RepRap printers working around the clock, feeding them with CAD files he has mined from the Protein Data Bank. In order to perfect these files, he first runs Python programming scripts that evolve the models until interesting shapes emerge, which he then hand picks and combines using image editing software.
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In a project, titled ‘Money’, artist Robert Wechsler turns ordinary pocket change into mind-boggling geometric sculptures.
Think back to the time of Geocities, to the time of ‘Web 2.0′ designs and closer to home, with the “flat design” trend that’s popular now. Now, in 2013, the web industry is changing as rapidly as ever.
Via Thomas Faltin
Typography is a wide field to show talent of any designer. Designer’s creativity and innovative thinking can show here. This article is for designer’s inspiration.
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Google Launches Web Designer, A Visual Tool For Building Interactive HTML5 ... TechCrunch Some of the more interesting ones Google has developed for Web Designer include a pen tool for free drawing, as well as a timeline for managing your animations.
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Joichi Ito talks about his unique approach to innovation in the age of internet. Ito shares his 9 principles which include 'risk over safety', ' practice over theory', and 'disobedience over compliance'.
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Daniel Edlen is an American artist best known for his ongoing series of vinyl artworks. Using white acrylic paint and a unique style of pointillism, Edlen paints amazingly realistic portrait...
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Jonathan Edwards is a talented illustrator and character designer based in the UK with a unique style that is instantly recognizable. His work first appeared in 1993 in Deadline and Tank Girl Magazine with strips such as Dandy Dilemma, Simon Creem, The Squabbling Dandies (with Richard Holland) and one pagers about, amongst others, Scott Walker, Sly Stone, Nancy Sinatra, Kraftwerk and The Beach Boys. Since then he’s worked for the Guardian, Mojo, Q, Mad, The Black Eyed Peas, A Skillz & Krafty Kuts, The Jungle Brothers, The Glastonbury Festival, etc. Comics include Aunt Connie & The Plague of Beards, A Bag Of Anteaters (with Ian Carney) and Two Coats McWhinnie (also with Carney). He’s also been a regular contributor to the Guardian since 1999 and illustrated the Hard Sell weekly column in the Guide since 2002.
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Played around with a couple of things. Enjoy the PSD, hope it'll be useful to someone.
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Kylli Sparre aka Sparrek spent years training to become a professional ballet dancer but later realized that wasn’t the path for her. “I have been searching for an outlet for my creativity ever since. I found it in photography and then never looked back. My passion lies in this, to create images which are surreal, dreamlike, they come from my thoughts, observations, experimentation’s and experiences. I desire to look beneath the surface, to hear the unsaid words and study the relationships between people and their surroundings and then project it all into my images.” - Kylli Sparre
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Spirographs and fractals look complicated but are actually very easy to create - it only takes a bit of experimentation. These fractals then can be used as artwork itself or as elements in photo manipulations, backgrounds, and graphic design related works.
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The process of creating a great responsive layout includes many factors. Fluid-width designs are similar, but not always built with mobile devices in mind. Any typical responsive web design is going to feature staple elements you’d expect to find in most website layout. Navigation is a big focal point because you need to handle the shift between desktop to mobile in a usable manner. In this article I want to cover various navigation trends found in great responsive websites. These examples should prove useful if you are new to responsive design or just want to understand navigation better. The mobile-responsive ideology is still fairly new and there is plenty of ground to cover for building unique solid navigation systems.
Pricing freelance web design services has always been an issue, as it is a very important matter that can make a huge difference in how your business is viewed by your customers.
Via Thomas Faltin
Sports based websites tend to have information overload so a lot of these websites tend to look cluttered and not very user friendly, a big challenge then is to find the best way to display all this information whilst keeping a good user experience.
Via Thomas Faltin
In this week's 'Photos of the Week' gallery I bring you a collection of surreal photography,
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Sara Riches is an Australian artist living in Wheatbelt of Western Australia. She uses a mixed number of mediums including pen and ink, pastels, watercolour, oils and mixed medium. Published book...
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When creating a new logo it’s not as simple as starting up Photoshop or Illustrator and slapping down an idea you have. A logo takes a lot of refinement and usually you have to go through many different ideas before coming to a final version. No program comes close to the freedom of paper and pen though. Most logo designers I know put their ideas down on paper first. They’ll come up with tens or hundreds of different ideas – they may have the same look but with different tweaks here and there. It’s a great way to quickly see what works and what doesn’t. Only when they’re happy with the final sketch, will they start creating it in on a computer. Here are some awesome logo sketches that should definitely be inspiring to any sort of design profession that requires some sort of illustration.
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Minimalism is a style appreciated by many designers. While it is not appropriate for every web design project, when a minimal design is done well it can be clean, striking, and it keeps the focus on the most important content. A design with a minimalist style seems like it would be easy, but many designers find it to be very challenging to create a minimal design that looks great. White space, balance, and typography are all important elements for pulling off this look. Many minimal designs use simple color schemes, but as you’ll see below there are some exceptions. Here are 25 websites that make use of very little unnecessary design elements but still manage to pull off a beautiful appearance. When it comes to design, if you feel that less is more, I’m sure you will find inspiration from these sites.
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When MOST people think of drawing, a picture being created by pencil or charcoal or some other medium would readily spring to mind.
“What happens to lovers while they are sleeping?” The answer could be in this fascinating series of long exposure pictures by Austrian photographer Paul Schneggenburger. These photographs are shot in the photographer’s spare bedroom against a backdrop of black sheets lit by Christmas lights. Curious about how people behave when they are asleep, Schneggenburger set up a six-hour exposure camera that works from midnight to 6am to record the ‘nocturnal lovers’ dance’.”
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British environmentalist Jonathan Porritt offers a photo-realistic vision of life on Earth in the year 2050. Spoiler alert: the future does not...
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