Showing posts with label swirls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swirls. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 November 2015

Blue skies, rain and denim

Then orange, then pink, so denim splurge.

John Lewis Edition (unknown)
Marie Claire. January 2011, pp. unknown


Embroidery on denim too is something that really fascinates me at the moment, 
some of my own embroidery below:

Testing out watercolour brush in MS Paint - nice texture, really irritating point/beginning of it though. If it was a gimp moving brush maybe that would be better? Blues abundance. 


John Lewis Edition Spring 2014/2013, pp. unknown



References:
John Lewis Edition. Spring 2013/2014, pp. unknown
Marie Claire. Spring/Summer 2013, pp. unknown

Friday, 13 December 2013

Postcards: the last of an old species of written word

Source: Post cards/promotional material from mid 2000s for
My So-Called Life (The Tragically Normal Diary of Rachel Riley)
By Joanna Nadin


Not actually read this book and probably never will at the rate its taking me to read my way through some books, but the covers of the postcards I found are bold and amusing, with soft mellow colours and swirls. I am going through a bit of a swirl doodling obsession at the moment, so though this doesn't help with that, at least it fuels it (in felt tip like colours).

Monday, 25 March 2013

Roses and swirls

 
 
 
 
Both have two 's' in them, and both, construct floral shapes
and at the same time simply decorative lines that can form swirls.
This is an old cutting from a Marks and Spencer Mother's Day advert
in a newspaper years ago.
Originally in colour (the roses were red),
but in greyscale you can pick out the swirling whorling pattern
created by these flowers.  

Friday, 14 October 2011

Above door decor - and the ryme thrown in for fun

On the way home one afternoon
I had to stop at this little bit of intricate (I believe metal work).
Photos are a bit blurry as this bit of work is situated above a door,
like a kind of mantel piece to a door actually.
The shapes and forms are clearly Victorian stylised motifs and shapes,
which twist and wind and curl around each other.

Sunday, 2 October 2011

New Diary from Paperchase


It would be a dream to sell work to Paperchase for them to
give money in return and then in turn,
turn that work into something adorning something as handy as a diary.
Admittedly I have a few months empty, from July to most of September,
but I can use that for extra notes space.
Not a bad price, and made in the UK,
felt pretty good about that last point.

Since my A levels I have grown a good attachment to spiral bound books.
Sketchbooks that are spiral bound are especially handy. 
The plastic cover is translucent, great fun with colour and shapes.
The beautiful swirls are reminiscent of Art Decor and the Arts and Crafts movement
Great times.
Red cardi put behind the back cover.
A slight tremor of my arm,
purposefull tremor of course.
Putting the small Paperchase bag under the cover is
quite an interesting blend of line and shape, more vertical darker shapes.

Friday, 20 May 2011

The Old

I always come across books in the library with amazing spines, makes me pick them out despite some being really big volumes of chunkyness filed with lots of text and some images. I flick through, then put them back....in the right place might I add (to all those smirfs who decide to just shove them anywhere).
Any way these I photographed a while ago. I will try to continue to photograph interesting patterned/ornamental spines.
As usual CLICK for a BIGGER image.

Vines and leaves, in lovely glossy gold
Intertwining motifs that link and curl