Holy green house 🪟🪴
Beautifully out of place stained glass green house
Striking stained glass construction that provides a fascinating focal point of light and colour on the street. It’s a delightful curiosity, quite out of place in an urban residential street in Central London
Via Street Art Utopia
0 notes
Dom Dom Dom! 🂓🂒🂑🂐🂏🂎🂍
Giant topple to launch city wide festival...
Via BBC News
0 notes
Making rubbish fly ♻️🗑🐝
Beautiful creations from fly-tipping and rubbish.
Sculptor Michelle Reader said...
"My sculptures draw attention to environmental issues in an aesthetic, humorous and non-confrontational way,"
Via BBC News
0 notes
Fighting inner-city gentrification 🏢🪧
Taking action against gentrification and fight for homes...
Via The Face
0 notes
Accessibility time ⏱
More Time Needed will give recipients with accessibility issues another option. Drivers will receive a specific instruction to make more time and wait for the recipient to come to the door, overriding other delivery instructions and procedures.
Via DPD
0 notes
Small brand. Big win. 📣
via the Drum
0 notes
Resales made simple 🤳🧥👕👚👖
Via Trend Watching...
Sewn into each garment is a unique QR code that's linked to its specific data set — fabric, color, size and original price. When a customer decides to clear that item out of their closet, it more or less sells itself. After scanning the code and connecting to a Facebook account, an ad is automatically generated and populated with the garment's details and photos. The owner only needs to add the condition it's in and the price they're asking.
0 notes
Weight of your mind...
Via Chloe Adams on LinkedIn
0 notes
Monumental moments of creation 🎨
The concept (above) is inspired by Guido van Helten’s experiences and observations at Mankato’s annual Mahkato Wacipi, a traditional powwow held every year at Dakota Wokisuye Makoce (Land of Memories Park). Intended as a gathering of nations to honour Dakota culture, the powwow is an important healing and reconciliation effort that acknowledges the ramifications of the 1862 war while working towards building a new, shared local history.
About the artist:
Guido van Helten is an Australian born visual artist and photographer (1986). He is an internationally recognised artist creating contemporary street art throughout the world which is underpinned by his exploration of community and identity generated through photography and large-scale mural installations.
See more work from Guido van Helten here
0 notes
A safe space 💛
A space where trans kids could feel safe and accepted.
Shira Berkowitz has answered the call to provide a place for LGBTQ+ children to feel like they belong. Berkowitz is one of the founders of Camp Indigo Point, a summer camp specifically for LGBTQ+ youth. The camp was inspired by their own experience as a camp program director—they were relieved of their duties after it was discovered that they were queer and the powers that be found it inappropriate for them to be a director for girls. Berkowitz told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency it “was really harmful to my identity. I went back in the closet for a few years.”
Via Upworthy
0 notes
Saying it how it is...
Sometimes things just need to be said. We love this subversive spoof ad campaign calling out issues with the housing market in NZ.
0 notes
Energy to Drive the performance 🚘🎶🎵
A remix full of joy and energy – 2019 Hilton College Competition Marimba band playing Drive by Black Coffee & David Guetta
1 note
·
View note
Art and conflict in Ukraine
Via BBC News
0 notes
Energy for change 🌍
Good Energy is a nonprofit creative consultancy that’s unlocking the power of TV and film to inspire courage in the face of climate change.
1 note
·
View note
Take it to the max 🛋
For every movement or trend there's an opposite. Maximalist pushes back against the minimalist mindset.
Maximalist interiors full of mismatched stuff are a sign of the times. Bel Jacobs explores the rise of creative chaos at home, and why it makes us feel safe and cocooned.
0 notes
Extraordinary everyday
Rob Walker from The Art of Noticing says...
T Magazine, the New York Times’ style magazine, ran an issue focused on a combination of day-in-the-life accounts and straight-up advice from a huge variety of artists and creators and performers. Lots of the advice really resonated with TAoN themes.
0 notes