Red Lips Kiss My Blues Away sheet music cover art. 1927. Via the Illinois University Library Collection Date: 1927 Physical Description: 1 item 31cm x 23.5cm Physical Condition: Good Genre: Cover Art Subjects: Sheet Music Cover Art Sousa Archives and Center for American Music University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 12/9/96 Box: 8 Folder: 9
Pssst! You've stumbled across content that is exclusive to Nessy's Keyholders. There’s a new way to access the really special stuff from Messy Nessy Chic … Hidden beneath the surface layers of the internet, there’s a place where we keep our most secret addresses, untapped archives, cr
12x18 on 65# cover weight kraft paper A tribute to strong women in u.s. history... Scarlett O'Hara/Vivien Leigh Marilyn Monroe Bette Davis Bettie Page Rosa Parks Elizabeth Taylor Maya Angelou Susan B Anthony Gloria Steinem Eleanor Roosevelt Harriet Tubman Amelia Earhart Billie Holiday Grace Kelly Princess Diana Annie Oakley This print is not available in any other sizes. Colors may vary slightly due to the printing process and paper stock. Thanks for looking! Posters are rolled and shipped via usps in a 3x15 mail tube. Buyers are responsible for any customs and import taxes that may apply. Sellers aren't responsible for delays due to customs.
“Snow is inherently nostalgic. It encourages you to travel back and think about your life.”
Do your students need activities with many problems to solve? This STEM challenge features engineering symmetrical sides of a wheel that will turn freely. It is challenging, but oh-so fun! Your upper elementary students will love this event. You will love the detailed Teacher's guide. ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM resource in a bundle of 3 projects. What is the challenge? Students will be using craft sticks and glue to make a spinning Ferris Wheel. The wheel has two sides and students must be diligent in making the sides match in size. In addition, the two sides must be joined with space left in the centers to add a central turning rod or axle. Add making a frame to hold the wheel aloft and you have a truly spectacular STEM challenge. Students will use the steps of the Engineering Design Process as you follow the pages of detailed and labeled teacher directions pages. This challenge is from my STEM by the Month collection. What is your prep? You will need supplies in addition to this package. This includes craft sticks, dowel sticks (3/16 to 1/4 inch diameter), hot glue guns and glue, and masking tape. This challenge can be completed using only masking tape. The package specifically includes: Cover Teacher background Materials and preparation page 8 pages of teacher directions Constraints list 3 pages of photographs Extra Hints page Student lab sheet – with sample answers Extra page of Ferris wheel information Scoring rubric Terms of Use page. All forms are provided in an editable format! This challenge will need 1-2 class sessions (1-2 hours) to complete. What are teachers saying? "The STEM students had fun creating this. The pictures were useful after they had a chance to design their own and test theirs out. We have 45 minutes and this project took two classes because they didn't want to stop building! Thanks!" "I used this as a STEM challenge during an after-school program. The students were very challenged, as one of the most important aspects is making the sides exactly symmetrical. This was age-appropriate, and ended up working well for kids that didn't give up!" "One of my best purchases this year! We finished reading the book Tuck Everlasting and I used this stem challenge as a culminating activity. They had to also write how the wheel is a metaphor for life. My 5th graders stated it was one of the favorite memories from the school year. Thank you!" ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM resource in a bundle of 3 projects. ➡️ Click here for the STEM for the Entire Year Bundle ➡️ Click here for Amusement Parks Nonfiction Reading Task Cards ***************************************************************************** You might also like these STEM Challenges- peferect for spring and summertime: Build a Water Slide Build a Roller Coaster Seed Dispersal Models Build a Bird Feeder Build a 3D Flower ***************************************************************************** Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and product launches: Click here to follow my store. It’s that easy to receive email updates about Thank you so much, Teachers Really are Terrific!
magazine about something we don't know
An online archive of digitized knitting magazines lets you flip through pages looking for patterns and helpful articles, from 1800 to the present.
Artist: Coles Phillips Source: eBay sellers Image Processing by: magscanner
Sarah Stilwell Weber (1878-1939) or (1863-1935), both sets of dates are in various places on the Internet, was a successful illustrator during the first two decades of the 20th century. Her illustrations graced the covers and interiors of several leading magazines as well as books and advertisements. Unfortunately, I can find little in the way of information about her on the Internet, though two sites dealing with her are here and here. What little detail follows is gleaned from Walt Reed's "The Illustrator in America, 1860-2000." Reed and other sources I'm inclined to trust have 1878-1939 as her dates. She studied under Howard Pyle both at Drexel and in summer sessions at Chadd's Ford. Reed also notes her book illustration work and some advertising clients. That being that, all I can do is present some examples of her work. Gallery Harper's magazine interior page - February 1903 Stilwell was hitting the big-time around age 25. Collier's - August 1907 Collier's cover art - 17 March 1906 One of Stilwell's best-known works. Saturday Evening Post cover - 19 January 1916 It seems she borrowed the general idea ten years later for Collier's rival, the Post. Saturday Evening Post cover - 29 January 1910 Saturday Evening Post cover - 20 August 1910 Many of her covers used children as subjects. Vogue cover - 15 October 1912 More leopard, this time skinned, and for Vogue. Vogue cover - 15 June 1913 This seems to be unsigned, but Internet sites credit her with the illustration. Collier's cover - 9 May 1914 A really fine illustration here. Saturday Evening Post cover - 3 March 1917 The Russian-type costume was ill-timed, because the February Revolution (March 8-12, new calendar) occurred just after this issue was off the news stands, and Russia became more chaotic than it usually was in those years.
Aurore Lephilipponnat is a French artist who incorporates Japanese Butoh dance into her charcoal drawings. Her visions often comprise of female or hybrid bodies who move gracefully across the page, suspended in various stages of life, death, and decay. In an interview with Artists of France, Lephilipponnat explains how Butoh is an art form capable...
"Art Nouveau – but make it spooky." That's Karl Alexander Wilke (1879-1954) in a nutshell. When first we found the Austrian-German illustrator, who carved out his own delightfully eerie corner of Art Nouveau artworks through clever magazines covers and adverts, we were suitably jazzed. Quite frankly
In the years since she faced down Leonardo DiCaprio’s Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street, Margot Robbie has persuasively staked her claim as far more than a so-called “bombshell,” a characterization that the actress strongly resents. “I’m not someone who walks in a room and the record stops and people turn like, ‘Look at that woman’,” she tells Irina Aleksander in our July cover story. A better word, at least by fellow Aussie Nicole Kidman’s estimation, would be “powerhouse,” and it fits: Next month, she is starring in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (fulfilling a career goal of working with filmmaker Quentin Tarantino) and Robbie’s now five-year-old production company, LuckyChap, has an extraordinary slate of female-fronted films currently in development. Here, in her cover slideshow, see the boundary-breaking star assume a few more roles in evocative looks by Marc Jacobs, Gucci, Dolce & Gabbana, Michael Kors, Chanel, Versace, Celine, and Burberry. Photographed by Inez and Vinoodh.
“Just did a new identity for @taidehalli. Website etc. coming up soon. Here's a poster for Hilma af Klint's exhibition”
Selection of book covers produced during the bookbinding revolution of the 19th century and beyond.
Tony Fitzpatrick is one of the most amazing people I have ever met but do not know. I'm GLAD I don't know him. You see, Tony came to my house to visit over 15 years ago shortly after I had stopped drinking. Mr. Fitzpatrick was an artist and a damn good one, he still is. After ten years drunk I was a recently sober art collector. Tony won't remember this, he'll barely remember me...but at that time, after confessing I was sober for the first time in forever, he asked me the question of four secret words exchanged between alcoholics. I said no, that I was doing it myself. Tony, after having only met me for the first time. looked me right in my eyes with his...his clear, powerful, serious eyes which only artists have, and said "If you ever feel like a drink again, you call me first." I have never had to. Memory is an amazing and curious thing. All of us go through our lives with hardly a thought about how we affect others. What to us might be a flippant comment, a friendly greeting, an abusive finger...could well stay with someone for years. It could stay with them forever. I guess it has to do with timing and chemicals. I could write a biography of Tony Fitzpatrick here with the standard sources, but he and others have done it for me. Suffice to say, he is a father, an artist, a blunt former pug and poet, a tough mother for ya, one of the brightest lights in Chicago and one of the most honest people I have met but never knew. However, like most of my friends, I knew he was there the whole time, and that is what mattered. Today Tony and I are a few tentacles away from each other on Facebook. I haven't written him, he hasn't written me. But I know he is there. Still. The images cribbed here are early work I can only assume are now owned by fortunate and proud collectors, if any want the images removed let me know. There is already a solid 25 years of good work behind Mr. Fitzpatrick and I could find more. Tony has done other work you have seen, most of Steve Earle's CD covers feature one of his works, as have others. He exhibits frequently at prominent galleries and his work is owned by prominent museums. His website is HERE
“St. Cecily (Cecilia)” Ezio Anichini Ezio Anichini is one of our all-time favorite artists. Working mainly in the Art Nouveau style (or Stile Liberty) of the early 20th Century, he was the master of dreamy religious portraits. Famous for his Litany of Loreto, less known are his extensive magazine covers he did for arts magazines in Italy, where he was often able to incorporate his Catholic faith into his assignments and promote Catholicism from the newsstands. In this one from 1907, Arts and Labor: Music and Musicians Illustrated Monthly Magazine, he has painted the primary Catholic Saint of music, St. Cecelia, and placed her in the hands of her angel, who is her muse, bringing her Heavenly inspiration. Muse, music, right? The word music (musica in Italian) comes from the Greek word mousike, which means "art of the Muses." There is something timeless and beautiful in Anichini's work, something we always find fresh and enjoyable. ** IMPORTANT ** THE IMAGE IS SMALLER THAN THE PAPER! There is a blank border all around the image of about .5" for 5x7, 1.3" for 8.5x11, 1.6" for 11x14, and 1.75" for 13x17". All Approx! The white space gives the framed picture a finished look without using a mat. *POSTER SIZES ARE PRINTED WITH SMALL BORDER* This is to preserve the dimensions of the original artwork. – Acid-free paper – Archival pigments, rated to last for generations. – Cardboard backer – Above story of the art – Enclosed in a tight-fitting, crystal clear bag. Thanks for your interest! Sue & John “In order to communicate the message entrusted to her by Christ, the Church needs art.” ~ St. Pope John Paul II Original image is out-of-copyright. Descriptive text and image alterations (hence the whole new image) © by Sue Kouma Johnson
Artist: Leon Guipon Source: Collector Wes Vogler Image Processing by: magscanner
Koloman Moser (1868-1918) Austrian artist influential in twentieth-century graphic arts. Book cover design for “Jugendschatz Deutscher Dichtung” (Treasures of German Literature for the Young) 1897 by Felicie Ewart Pencil, pen, and ink on paper MAK–Austrian Museum for Applied Arts/Contemporary Art, Vienna Featured in “German Art and Decoration” (1897/1898) by A. Koch: archive.org/stream/deutschekunstund05kochuoft#page/304/mo...
In one of the scenes from Laura Callaghan’s illustrations, a girl with lavender locks punches a blonde in the parking lot of a retro motel. From the sidel
Artist: Source: eBay seller ThomasC at American Art Archives, which also has its own wonderful website about American illustrators
Based in Providence, Rhode Island, Jon Foster is an award-winning sci-fi and fantasy artist. Best known for his covers for DC Comics and Dark Horse Comics, his
Teodor Axentowicz - Cover Illustration for Weekly Illustrated No. 14, Warsaw, 1908
I saw this on Design Sponge over the weekend and was so wowed by it — both as a public art project and as a bit of DIY inspiration. It’s the brainchild of architect Tali Buchler, who describes herself on her blog like this: “I don’t design houses so much anymore. I use my design […]
Sherrie McGraw will have a solo exhibition at the Butler Institute of American Art that features seventy-five paintings and drawings.
Antique photographs gain a new kind of lively texture in this series, entitled Dare alla Luce. Canadian photographer Amy Friend collects the prints from a
Kanye West, David Bowie, J Balvin, and more have commissioned museum-quality album art from art-world superstars
3 simple steps to telling a great story. Heros, plus conflicts, plus clear resolutions lead to a story anyone can enjoy.
One of the first things you'll start to notice about Joe Christian Leyendecker's work is that his women were never quite as good-looking as his men, who were devastatingly handsome. He gave us the elegance of Gatsby 20 years before F. Scott Fitzgerald had even invented him. Take a moment to observe
Если вы посмотрите на иллюстрации Джозефа Кристиана Лейендекера, то первое, что вы заметите, его женщины никогда не были столь же хороши как его мужчины, эти убийственно красивы. Он дал им элегантность Гэтсби за 20 лет до того, как Ф. Скотт Фицджеральд изобрел ее. Присмотритесь к лихому мужчине на…
Painting’s funeral was canceled at the last minute.
Share in the secrets of the world’s most innovative textile artists. Find out where to look for inspiration, how to develop ideas, techniques to bring your art to life, plus much more.
Bennington College in the 1980s was a hothouse of sex, drugs, and future literary stars--among them, Donna Tartt, Bret Easton Ellis, and Jonathan Lethem. Return to a campus and an era like no other.
Check out this amazing story behind the counterfeit Rockwell painting 'Breaking Home Ties.'