Last week a WMFC follower sent me a link to Dianne Ayres website Arts and Craft Period Textiles that sells gorgeous hand-embroidered pillows in Arts and Craft designs. Even more enjoyable, you can buy the designs and materials as a full kit and make these pieces yourself. Really beautiful. I wondered who stitches the finished pillows? If I find out, I'll update post. Kits run about $45 and finished pillows around $150-250.
Detroit has over 12,000 abandoned houses, a small number of which have been documented by photographer Kevin Bauman's in his haunting 100 Abandoned Houses project. The city is offering many of these homes free or for trivial amounts of money and in a few places little island of anti-blight are growing. My first thought was "a renovator's dream!" but the scale of the urban decay soon overwhelms.
These pieces, a glider bench, glider chair, small table, and chaise lounges, were all made with hand tools (some electric) and materials from the local hardware store. The cushions for the chaise lounges were made with regular pillows. All click to enlarge.
26-year-old Asmaa Mahfouz of Egypt was featured in the New York Times yesterday. On January 18th she recorded this video and uploaded it to YouTube and Facebook where it quickly went viral. It called for her fellow citizens to join her in protest in Tahrir Square on January 25th.
“As long as you say there is no hope, then there will be no hope, but if
you go down and take a stance, then there will be hope.”
It says: "28 van Gogh paintings visualized as pie charts showing the five most common colours in each as a percentage. Can you tell which one's which?"
Art meets science and makes beautiful children. Would love to see more! Artist Arthur Buxton is having a show at The Arts House in Bristol with a reception on Friday the 18th of February.
Jodi's comment on the knitting post a few days ago reminded me of an awesome Xmas gift she made a few years back for one proud geek we both know....a Dr. Who scarf. Above is actor Tom Baker in the original scarf and below is Jodi's scarf. A website devoted to the history of this iconic scarf, complete with free knitting instructions, can be found at doctorwhoscarf.com.
Charles Rupert Designs and Historic Style. An older post about Wm Morris wallpaper is here (you can also search blog using "wallpaper" for additional posts or click on "wallpaper" in tag cloud).
"All artists love and honor William Morris" --- Frank Lloyd Wright
About William Morris
William Morris (1834-1896) was an English writer, artist, poet, socialist, craftsman, and designer who is probably best known for his influence on the Arts and Crafts Movement and wallpaper design in particular. He founded the British socialist party as well as the first society dedicated to the preservation of historical buildings. Morris's work blurred the line between art and craft. To live in a "Morris" house would be to be surrounded by hand-made items of beauty and functionality. Morris rejected the common, the mass-produced, the tacky (he would have called it the shoddy). He revived old crafts and traditions, often immersing himself in historical texts or seeking out craftsmen from whom he could learn dying arts, be they weaving, stained glass, dyeing, embroidery, metalwork, or printing. Long considered the father of the Arts and Crafts Movement, his philosophical approach to design, and life, still finds vital expression in the 21st century community of crafters and do-it-yourselfers.