Wednesday 29 March 2017

Skeletor, you're so Money Supermarket

The Tank



Post-production company The Tank find an amusing way to promote themselves.

Cheeky student campaign




Saw this and it really made me smile.

A student campaign for Fibre One produced by art director Diana Friedman (who also did the photography) and copywriter Austin White.

Grey rebrands


100 years after it was founded, Grey is rebranding to honour its Jewish founders and make a stand for diversity and tolerance in the modern world.

Get the full story here.

Flying houses








High above the Parisian skyline float French artist Laurent Chéhère's vision for a world without gravity. 

And it's kind of trippy.

Sports logos go green







Thanks to Iceland-based artist James Merry who embroiders them with plants, vegetables and animals of the natural world.

The effect of which is pretty bloody cool.

Monday 27 March 2017

Friday 24 March 2017

Arinze Stanley's outrageous portraits


Seriously, how the fuck?

Some people are sublimely talented. Nigerian artist Arinze Stanley is clearly one such person.

Outrageous.












Owning your condition


People don't like to think they have a condition. They don't want to be defined by it. And they certainly don't want to teased because of it.

But this is the position Ash Soto found herself in from the age of 12.

Ash has the skin condition Vitiligo which causes patches on the skin where pigmentation has been lost. She started getting teased for it as if it was something within her control or she'd made a conscious effort to have it.

Fed up with the idiots that teased her, she came up with a way to own her condition and rediscover the love for her skin and, ultimately, her body.

Those familiar to Instagram may know her by a different name - RadiantBambi.

She's an amazing girl and she's found a wonderful way to make her condition as beautiful as the rest of her.

Hovering art directors are dicks

Yes we are. And Adobe Stock have called us out on it.


Further, and funnier, executions can be found here.

Thursday 23 March 2017

The vanishing step wells of India










A new book by Chicago journalist Victoria Lautman highlights the decaying conditions of these once elaborate public structures.

They look stunning as decaying relics so imagine what they looked like in their prime.