주로 타나카 타츠야라는 일본아티스트의 작품이야 (아닌 것도 있음) 타나카씨의 홈피는 여기 http://miniature-calendar.com/ 관심있는 사람은 가보길~
What would you do with a swimming pool filled with tea? The tea is Nourishing Sencha from Teanobi. The models are HO scale. I was going for something playful and whimsical.
L’art urbain ne s’étale pas toujours sur d’immenses murs en béton. Il sait aussi se faire discret, presque secret, ne s’offrant seulement qu’aux regards les plus atten…
Inside your head.
Explore simon zalto's 942 photos on Flickr!
Paper artist and illustrator Laura K. Sayers creates miniature hand cut paper figures that have been delighting the masses - masses of Inst...
A list of most creative books ever made. Girdle Book, Mechanical Encyclopedia, Sensory Fiction, Tree Book Tree, Drinkable Book, and more.
Photographer Derrick Lin captures the minutiae of everyday office life across landscapes of notebooks, paper clips, and coffee mugs populated with tiny figures. Working only with his iPhone, desk lighting, and a broad array of miniatures, Lin creates visual commentary on office life as well as recreations of popular artworks or scenes of escape. Many of his photos have been collected into an upcoming book titled Work, Figuratively Speaking: The Big Setbacks and Little Victories of Office Life, published this fall through Universe. More
Pepsi has always been known for creating daring, creative and badass advertisements. Being one of the most competitive carbonated beverage maker, these
I diorami sono delle scene in miniatura e richiedono la capacità di catturare azioni e vicende su scala microscopica. Questi mondi in miniatura spaziano
Mozu may be just 20 years old, but the artist is already crafting awe-inspiring miniature worlds. Works like "The Stairs of the Dwarf" take four months to complete. The artist’s recreations of his bedroom, telephone poles, and “my working desk” show a knack for recreating the everyday in diorama format.
Amigos, amantes, familias, grupos de excursionistas, extraños que se encuentran en un bosque… A los diminutos personajes de Kendal Murray les basta...
Dutch multidisciplinary artist Vera van Wolferen (previously) produces miniature balsa wood sculptures, architectural objects that are either incorporated into animations or left motionless to tell their own stories. Her static works are often displayed beneath glass bell jars, leaving the audience to imagine that the tiny tree houses, cottages, and campers are neatly contained within their own universes. Van Wolferen also uses simple craft materials like cotton to enhance her sets, making it appear as if her sculpted homes are resting amongst the clouds. More
Winter 2014 Issue
Your up-to-the-minute guide to London life, news, culture, pop-ups, openings and LOLs
I love to eat Chinese food...of all kinds, so I wanted to make a tutorial about how to make them into miniature charms. I'm in Orland...
In a fix about what to do with your old, broken guitar? Here are 16 recycling ideas to turn your old guitar into beautiful home decor.
L'artiste japonais Tatsuya Tanaka réalise de formidables scènes miniatures en détournant des objets du quotidien qui font l'objet d'un calendrier créatif.
Per Tatsuya Tanaka l'immaginazione non ha limiti. L'artista giapponese riesce a vedere in oggetti comuni una storia, che mai avremmo pensato di trovarci.
Découverte de cette série « Bodyscape » par l’artiste Allan Teger mettant en scène des miniatures et des corps de femmes. Une série photo datant d
This garden kit is a foldable, indoor greenhouse. Created by Infarm with partner Tomorrow Machine, the innovative garden allows you to grow vegetable sprou
Bestel daar heb je een punt! als print. Kies zelf de maat en het materiaal. Snel geleverd, hoge kwaliteit.
You may remember John Farrier's post about the Bonsai Tree Castle, which was created by Japanese artist Takanori Aiba. Well Takanori's art certainly doesn't stop there, and would you believe that the rest of his miniature worlds (structural sculptures) are even more fantastic than the tree castle?! With a style ripped straight from mythology and every minor detail accounted for, these tiny kingdoms look like a great place for fairy folk to call home. Link --via Booooooom!...
Thanks to the brains of a photographer with imagination, the worlds of Miniature Calender are magical - but they're all using props we see every day
Cardboard Favela by Pamela Sullivan
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
The debate on whether a design is good or bad is a never-ending one. From terrible public space "solutions" to ideas so bad, it’s hard to believe someone came up with them, we've covered plenty of the latter over the years. So how about we balance out the scales a little bit?
Your Eyes Will Deceive You! - Funny WIN Photos and Videos
Banana Stand In April 2011, art director and photographer Tatsuya Tanaka created the Miniature Calendar as a way to craft scenes for his diorama dolls.
Sounds like an anomaly, right? When I was a kid folding frogs, my mother gave me origami paper that was most certainly dry. But the works below by Vietnamese-American artist Giang Dinh were folded with one *wet* piece of paper. It's a technique called "Wet-Folding", invented by the great Japanese origami master Akira Yushizawa (pictured right).
This is the beautifully bohemian (and slightly mad) small world of French artist Ronan-Jim Sevellec. At 80 years of age, his most recent exposition was in 2012 and saw his boxes of tiny artist's workshops and old antique rooms displayed in various eccentric and romantic locations around Paris. Ro
Design Within Reach may be too expensive for some of us but their annual cork furniture design competition is affordable for all. One of the best parts about this design challenge is its broad accessibility: no specialized tools, structural knowledge or design experience are required. Some entra ...