Alright, now what?

No really, now what?

ianbrooks:

Terrible Yellow Eyes by Alberto Cerriteño

Part of the Where the Wild Things art show at Gallery Nucleus in California a few years ago. You can see more of these paper-cut sculptures at  Alberto’s flickr.

Artist: behance / website / etsy

ianbrooks:

Electri-flowers by Robert Buelteman

Nothing worth doing was ever easy, and Robert’s complex method of capturing these images has been honed over a 10 year span, with an average of 60 hours per week to produce just 80 images. Starting by placing a plant on a metal board, Rob then passes an electrical current through it, getting its juice from a simple car battery. He then takes a fiber optic cable and runs it over the surface, capturing the invisible radiation emitted from the electrical charge, and burning the sliver of light onto film. And I’m pretty sure this is how super-powered mutated plants that one day enslave the human race are created. So thanks for that, Rob.

Artist: website (via: dailymail / reddit)

ianbrooks:

Lunchbox Awesome by Heather Sitarzewski

Making a cute pop cultural bento box lunch for her son, Heather began documenting her daily delicacy designs. They look so good, I dont even want to put them in my mouth! Follow Heather’s yummy updates at her tumblr: lunchboxawesome.

Artist: blogspot (via: boingboing)

devidsketchbook-art:

Artist PHILLIP STEARNS

Phillip Stearns uses electronics to create phenomenological works of light and sound. Deconstruction, dissection, and reconfiguration are methods he commonly employs in his hands-on approach to creating works using electronics, treating them as tools for sculpting electricity. [via: artistswanted]

ianbrooks:

The Scientist and the Smuggler by James White

I suddenly want a time-traveling buddy movie between these two like yesterday. Get it… because it’s a time travel joke.

Artist: behance / twitter / blog / shop

ckck:

Seems like IKEA are really shaking things up this year. In addition to the previously announced TV set, they’re also going to release a digital camera made of cardboard called Knäppa (“Snap”). It’ll hold 40 photographs at a time and plugs directly into your USB port. While it’s not the prettiest camera the world has ever seen, I do love the idea of a screen-less digital camera that brings people back to the wait-and-see days of film.

(via esobvio)

ianbrooks:

Adventure Time: Awesome Aftermath by Michael Rogers

Prints available at etsy.