Ever since my first version of The Hibiscus Robe free sewing pattern, I've wanted to sew ten million more in every decadent fabric I can think of. Ombré charmeuse was dramatic and luxurious, but I can easily imagine cascading chiffon and billowing organza. Maybe even a voluminous faille to turn the robe into a dress? For this redux, I opted for one of my fabric faves: a stunning floral embroidered mesh. From boudoir to bourgeois, this all-lace version of The Hibiscus is sure to bring the drama.
Website / Instagram / Store
Last week iGNANT went strolling through the galleries of Berlin, looking for inspiring artists and artworks. Our first discovery was Asger Carlsen at Dittrich & Schlechtriem Gallery, a Danish artist living and working in New York. Looking at his exhibition called ‘Hester’ I was quite confused what I was actually looking at. Photographs? Sculptures? Collages? […]
For my Ancient History major, I wrote my publication project on The Dominance of Heterosexual Passion in Post-Classical Literature. I had discovered from a Lecturer that there was a shift in Greek …
Norman Rockwell and Mead Schaeffer were friends and neighbors, but each artist painted in very different styles.
Feature image by the talented Cyril Rolando. Check out his Tumblr here. Lines have been used by artists and designers to convey mood since the first drawings in cave walls. Through repeated use, certain patterns and lines have gained universally recognized meanings. These were documented in Landscape Architecture, by John Ormsbee Simonds, who put together a diagram of […]
Norman Rockwell and Mead Schaeffer were friends and neighbors, but each artist painted in very different styles.
All textures in this set are free to use, commercially or non-commercially - as long as you provide credit to the source - see the CC: BY Licence for details If you found this texture useful, please let me know in the comments! And fell free to add tags, so that others can easily find it as well.
Read Pink and more premium Thriller/horror Community series now on Tapas!
"They’re not paid a lot. But the facts are, they actually don’t come here for the money."