Want to declare your love for java in a scientific fashion? Check out Column Five’s In Caffeine We Trust infographic print. Track your coffee consumption over the course of a month, then use the stuff to paint on the final results.
Where can the wordsmith, typographer and holiday Scrooge happily collide? Right here with Martin O’Neill’s What’s Wrong With Christmas word search. Enjoy vintage fonts amidst a list of holiday gripes and complaints to search for.
Let’s kick off this week of thanksgiving with a little bit of just that.
Help Ink is a collaborative art project, and with each purchase you’ll be doing your part to help charitable organizations and individuals around the world. Because as much as we complain about the US of A, let’s face it, our lives are good. This morning I’m really happy to partner with Help Ink for a double-doozy giveaway that features two of their killer pieces of art! Now read carefully, because this is actually two giveaways in one and you’ll need to enter each separately.
GIVEAWAY #1 – Good Deeds by Jon Contino 18 x 24″ giclee 40% of profits of this print support Smile Train
To Enter:
1. Tweet about the giveaway! Be sure and include the hashtag #HelpInk (ex. I just entered the #HelpInk giveaway over at @designcrush!)
2. Pop back over here and let me know you posted your tweet by linking to it. (Make sure you do, I’ll be cross-referencing!)
3. Do both before Sunday, November 27th at midnight EST.
To Enter:
1. Sign up for Help Ink’s newsletter here.
2. Leave a comment letting me know you’re subscribed. (I’ll be checking you twice!)
3. Do both before Sunday, November 27th at midnight EST.
When I was about ten years old I became obsessed with drawing pool parties. And in them the girls diving into the water were always drawn with their hair hanging down, as if they were hanging upside down instead of throwing themselves into a body of water. It made sense at the time, I guess that’s how I viewed gravity. That’s what this landscape by Vikachu reminds me of, I love how the landscape builds vertically upon itself. And get this – ten dollars.
Completely in love/obsessed/enthralled with Bark Design’s Smoke Signals giclee print. There’s something about the realism of the foxes and the abstractness of the geometric pieces that’s got me ensnared.