Recortables

Posted by Bibi | Posted in craft, fun, politics, toys | Posted on 23-01-2008

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Recortable del Papa
The Spanish blog Recortables shares papercraft models with political criticism, created by Sento Llobell, comics illustrator, and Toni Vaca, “speciallist on wasting time“. There are papercraft caricatures of George W. Bush – El Carnicero Global, the king of Spain Juan Carlos I – El Campechano, Bin Laden – Ex-guerrero de la C.I.A., the pope Bendicto XVI and few others.They are available to download directly, as zip archive, or using eMule. (via Paper Forest)

My Lilliput

Posted by Bibi | Posted in photography, toys | Posted on 22-01-2008

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GianlucaFabrizio.jpg
My Lilliput is a fabulous Flickr set with catchy macro pictures with tiny plastic toys interacting with strawberries, nuts, flowers, vegetables and other stuff. The photos of those tiny people were taken by Gianluca Fabrizio.
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Plush Internal Organs

Posted by Bibi | Posted in toys, weird | Posted on 21-01-2008

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Plush Internal Organs Set
Kids, and many adults, love plush and stuffed toys. That’s why there are so many options available: classic teddy bears, bunnies, hearts, cute animals, plush food, cthulhus, microbes, pee and poo, and even sushi for puppies. The Brazilian designer brothers Fernando and Humberto Campana also explore the huge universe of plus toys re-creating them in a project called “Banquete Chair”: chairs made with plush toys, from chairs made using diverse plush animals, to chairs made only with bears, or only with sharks and dolphins.
Now I have a new great surprise in the plush science universe: Plush Internal Organs. The toys were created by I Heart Guts!, which has more options of stuff with pretty illustrations with those and more smiling internal organs: bags, T-shirts, buttons, stickers and artwork. The plush set contains lungs, liver, kidney and heart – a nearly anatomic correct heart, not those stupid fake hearts without veins – and it’s available for $67.00. They are also be selling individually. That’s a great gift, with the Giant microbes, for any children who wants to be a doctor, and probably to almost anyone you know.
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Hieronymus Bosch’s birds papercraft

Posted by Bibi | Posted in art, craft, toys | Posted on 18-01-2008

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Bosch's helmet bird papercraft
Hieronymus Bosch is on the top of my list of painter that I think had a disturbed brilliant mind. His paintings full of bizarre and scary creatures are an example of how far can go the human mind and how far the Catholic church went to its absurd ideas of hell and sins.
Among his works, the “The Garden of Earthly Delights” is the one I most like. The reason involve the strawberries – meaning sex, the fantastic details, the numerous odd situations, the colours, the division in three stages, the luxury all over the second painting, situations and the grotesque creatures.
Bosch's letter bird papercraft
It’s from that painting that Atom, from Glue² chronicle, got the idea of made two papercraft models: the helmet bird and the letter bird. As you can see, the models look pretty nice, and compared with its complexity, that turns them even more neat. Both models are ready and available to download as bmp or pdo. To open the pdo you will need the Pepakura Viewer, wich is also free to download. The kids won’t have more excuses to play of purgatory at home. (via ectoplasmosis)
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Giant Zombie LEGO Men

Posted by Bibi | Posted in art, toys, weird | Posted on 18-01-2008

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Giant Zombie LEGO Man
After those LEGO® Ice Brick Tray to make your own pieces of iced LEGO, the Giant Zombie LEGO Men ATTACK! are great present for LEGO enthusiasts. Two models of those customizes and painted 19″ LEGO zombies were created using plastic, resin, metal, paint, for the for retro-inspired art show, Back In The Day by Andrew Bell. They aren’t available for now, but they would be great to re-enact a George Romero’s film and playing of eating brains of another toys.

Take-G Toys

Posted by Bibi | Posted in art, design, toys | Posted on 17-01-2008

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Take-G craft
I don’t remember having seen wood toys prettier than those by take-g toys. Takeji Nakagawa, aka Take-G, creates adorable toys and crafts, like the wonderful wood robots. The robots and his other crafts are actually art works, sold only at exhibitions and art galleries. About his work:

Yosegi-Mokuzougan, or joined wooden block construction, is craft skills where combinations of original and unique colors and textures of different kinds of wood are utilized to express artistic patterns. In Japan, the Hakone-Odawara region is famous for this traditional handicraft. Products of the Take-g Toy’s have expanded this traditional craft skill, which usually employs two-dimensional patterns, by using three-dimentional patterns, instead. We use four different kinds of wood, a keyaki (a Japanese tree of the genus Zelkova), a teak, a walnut, and a white ash.

Arata Sasaki interviewed Takeji Nakagawa for Hitspaper. The interview is available in Japanese and English.

Little People

Posted by Bibi | Posted in photography | Posted on 02-10-2007

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Tourists
Little People - a tiny street art project. Pictures of tiny plastic man in the streets of London and surroundings, and installations by Slinkachu. Take a look also on his set of pictures to Nuart event at the Rogaland kunstmuseum in Stavanger, Norway.
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Friday Cat Blogging Stuff

Posted by Bibi | Posted in Friday Cat Blogging, cats, comics, design, technology, toys, vintage | Posted on 28-09-2007

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Gato - Israel Chavira
Here are my collection of links with cats, specially saved to blog today. And before you run away complaining “Oh no, cat pictures!”, take a look on the images and their descriptions. They have cats, of course, but they aren’t all just about cats.
The toy above, called Gato, was designed by Israel Chavira. This cat loves honey, probably cause his bee body type. A silly curiosity: the Spanish word “Gato” means cat, chat, Katze, katt, gàtto, and it has the same writing for Portuguese, gato.
thing_learned_cats.jpg
Among the hundreds of cool scanned images of Modern Mechanix, the vintage articles with cats always get my attention. And, of course, I saved them to share: Cats Are Fun to Photograph, From Cats to Cataclysms, Cat Pictures Used to Scare Away Birds, Blows Glass Globe Around Cats (no cats were harmed!) and Things I Learned from Ten Thousand Cats. The last article is from 1934, but some things about what we know about cats didn’t change.

By A. J. Adamson

ONLY by dealing patiently and kindly with a cat, particularly during its early life, may you develop the sort of animal everyone wants as a companion and pet. Unlike dogs, cats will respond only to kindness. Punish them and they grow surly and spiteful. I speak from rich experience, having bred fully 10,000 cats during the last quarter of a century.

The old idea was that every animal should be punished when caught in a wrongful act, but cats do not understand the meaning of a whipping. They are weak-willed and easily tempted and must, therefore, be guided in paths of righteousness.

Laugh-Out-Loud Cats #317
Before all those stupid mania of LOLcats (I’m tired of them), there was The Laugh-Out-Loud Cats, a comic strip created and illustrated by the cartoonist Aloysius “Gorilla” Koford, according to Adam Koford his grandson. From 1912-1913 he produced a comic strip which was featured in 17 newspapers, including the Philadephia Star-Democrat, the Tampa Telegraph, and the Santa Fe Good-Newser. It featured the exploits of one Meowlin Q. Kitteh (a sort of cat hobo-raconteur) and his young hapless kitten friend, Pip. Adam is sharing those “treasures” (the comics are brilliant), and until now there are 340 images on the Flickr set. BTW, there is something on those comics that reminds me Krazy Kat. (via Will You Look At That)
iCat
The iCat is a project developed by Philips Research Technologies in 2005. I think iCat is a bit scary.

iCat is a research platform for studying human-robot interaction topics. The robot is 38 cm tall and is equipped with 13 servos that control different parts of the face, such as the eyebrows, eyes, eyelids, mouth and head position. With this setup iCat can generate many different facial expressions – happy, surprise, angry, sad – that are needed to create social human-robot interaction dialogues.
A camera installed in iCat’s head can be used for different computer vision capabilities, such as recognizing objects and faces.

Eek on the Plant Cup
The giant Plant Cup designed by Gitta Gschwendtner, was available at YouSayTomayto for $338.00. You can’t buy it for now, however, you can take a look on set of pictures Plant Cup, with more demonstrations of its uses by Eek, the grey cat, and Miss Moneypenny. Grey cats rock.

Tummie-Design

Posted by Bibi | Posted in craft, illustration, toys | Posted on 24-09-2007

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The lost giraffe
On Tummie-Design you will find the super cute portfolio of Tummie with illustrations, toys and animations, her shop with lovely bags and wallets with monsters (cute monsters I may say), and some very pretty things she made to download, including icons, wallpaper and the adorable papermodel “mover” (bellow). (via Paper Forest)
Mover Papermodel
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Devout Dolls

Posted by Bibi | Posted in craft, toys | Posted on 19-09-2007

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The Sailor and the Octopus
The talented Sara Lanzillotta makes fantastic handmade dolls, creatures and monsters. Her site Devout Dolls presents a huge collection of her creations: Dolls of the Silver Screen, aliens, fairies, octopus, Siamese twin dolls, little strange creatures, witches, two headed kitties, Indian gods, mermaids, dolls of popular characters like Harry Potter’s Herminone, Neil Gaiman’s Death, Sally from Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas and the Wonder woman.
The Alice the Pirate bellow is a small homage to Talk Like A Pirate Day. (via The Mystery of the Haunted Vampire)
Alice the Pirate

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