Showing posts with label light. Show all posts
Showing posts with label light. Show all posts

Monday, 21 October 2013

Colour Archive: Stylist (unknown issue no, 2012/13)

Magazine online @ http://www.stylist.co.uk/
 
 The pages below, scanned in from the magazine, would make a particularly beautiful desktop or mobile wallpaper (maybe even literal wallpaper for interior design?).
Why not include the text too?
See, this is why I use magazines to collage from, their sources of colour is immeasurable.
Due to the cost of inkjet printing and colour laser printing (which is mind numbingly high), printing sheets and sheets of coloured stuff just seems like madness. In the end using pages from found or bought magazines makes more sense and to sweeten the deal different magazines use different kinds of papers. For example, Stylist uses this soft paper that is like newsprint but much better quality for printing on and unlike its glossy sisters, you can in fact draw, annotate and doodle on the pages.
 
Beautiful Technicolor.
Yes ladies and gents, that is colour spelt the British way :) 
 
 
 

Monday, 12 August 2013

Archived Snip: Independant Radar, grunge and sequins

Scans from an old Independent Radar magazine from a Saturday Independent
- dunno the date but I can say with a bit of certainty that is it from this year.  
The above costume is really fascinating just because of the abundance of blue glittering sequins.
They catch the light really well, making the costume look more and more intricate and
expensive or couture like.
Then there is the mask made from a kind of net that is also lined with sequins.
The face made highlights the unconventional use of sequins over the facial features.     
 In the above and below images, the singer is dressed in different textures, including feathered,
which beside the grungy and splattered background makes everything look raw and edgy.   

Monday, 5 August 2013

Archived Snip: Blue flowers and Golden Light

Some found clippings from magazine advertisements:
(Can't remember which one).

This beautiful very simply coloured pale blue on white
presents two different flowers in a repeating pattern
surrounded by stems and leaves. Its hard to tell where the
repeat begins and ends in the original snippet. 
The edge of the cutting presents a nice
picture of real (or maybe fabric/fake?)
flower with the carefully printed floral image
that is either a wallpaper or a vinyl sticker.
In a beautiful kind of rhubarb red/pink.
This damask like pattern is very regal looking - suiting the wedding based advertisement naturally. The rich golds and the lighting of the image seem to show a richness of the pattern that perhaps wouldn't be seen without such effects. the pattern is very Victorianesque.

Friday, 12 April 2013

Stripes and dots in pink and purple

 
 
















Stripes and spots
 
Spots, circles and polka dots.
Is it a coincidence that sibilance is in these words?

In reality this fabric is pink only,
but my camera made areas of the fabric appear purple.
This piece of fabric is one that I am working with at the moment; it is a particularly bold fabric piece. The pinks and the bold graphic patterns that consist of wild cat print patterns,
like the stripes of a tiger and spots of a cheetah, blend together wonderfully. The material itself is lightweight and fairly thin, though not really translucent. The print is very stripe orientated.
As with any other kind of fabric that is produced with saris or shalwar kameezs in mind there is another piece that matches this in terms of colour and print, I imagine this piece is meant to be made into the shalwar/trouser and this above piece as the tunic/dress/kameez.
Hopefully I can find the matching piece to it.    
 

Friday, 23 December 2011

Pretty Packaging: Herbal Essences

A free sample in Marie Clare, January issue - £2
Such pretty packaging I oculdn't 
resist scanning it into the computer.
This packaging has a great use of colour, 
such a tropical looking blue that has great impact, 
then on top the grunge like marks in silver and green. 
I just looked up what grunge actually means, 
one of its definitions is dirt and grime, 
the other being a type of rock music. 
But now I finally know.
The beautiful flowers adorning the packaging are orchids
and look at the detail of venation and marks on the petals. 
A short post this is, yes, but I'll be collecting some stuff 
to talk about in the next post. 
Oh and the shampoo and conditioner were amazing. 
Smelt lovely too.

Monday, 12 December 2011

Monument a-glow with light

This is in the Monument area in Newcastle, around the NE1 area.
Normally Christmas decoration in the streets,
ie lighting tends to be in forms of Santa and other such characters.
But these take a more abstract bauble like appearance.
The circles when not lit up have been shown in the previous post.
But as with many things they look amazing all lit up in blue and white.

Friday, 9 December 2011

Round, blue and white

Christmas is upon us –
or so the Newcastle City Centres’ decoration tells me.
That and the Fenwicks window display.
The decorations in town are normally quite typical,
but these blue circular baubles like motifs
are the most interesting and pretty
both when lit up and when not lit.

They look like a collection of flatish bubbles, or even baubles,
in blue, white and light blue
and using simple geometric shapes and dots to fill them.
Their clear modern cut styling stands out against
the backdrop of the beautiful Newcastle upon Tyne’s historic buildings
in the town centre, like in monument.
It’s interesting to find pattern
where most feel there is nothing special there,
but the fact that these shapes have been used
shows their versatility, they work amongst things
that don’t directly relate to them in shape form or colour.

Saturday, 17 September 2011

Shisha (also known as abla) Embroidery

An old kameez which I adored for the
embroidery and especially for its mirror work,
a traditional technique in India and Pakistan 
and other countries in which small pieces of mirror
are secured onto fabric and embroidered around
The simple grids of light pink thread, as seen above, 
are cleverly couched down with the actual thread
making up the material of the kameez (a tunic like top).
The two large mirrors above are
embroidered to look like mirror flowers.
Blue and pink make an amazing colour combination.
A play of colour fused with that of light and mirrors.
The unique bead work uses small wooden like tubular like beads.
Shisha Embroidery TIY (Try it yourself) with clear photos and instructions
There is a bit of information about Shisha Embroidery on 
Wikipedia but so far I haven't found much on the web or in the local library.