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anonymous

Make Your Own Crimped Texture on Card or Paper | Make Your Own Card - 0 views

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    If you are interested in making your own textures on paper, then check out this video. Using this technique you can make diamond crimped backgrounds, perfect to make your own card with a unique touch. It is a very simple process and it achieves an amazing result. You will need a paper crimper, sticky tape, glue and of course paper or cardboard. Watch this video to see how to make this diamond crimped background that you can use to make your own card.
stvalentine stvalentine

Amazing 3D Paper Design! - 2 views

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    Make this awesome 3D design from a single sheet of paper. Super simple! Click the link below for the template.http//img130.imageshack.us/img130/18...
stvalentine stvalentine

How to decorate the MagicFlips™ with TheMagicTouch® TTC TransferPaper - 1 views

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    Print TTC Transfer Paper in a Colour Laser/LED Printer and apply to the FlipFlops with a professional Heat Press.
c newsom

Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner papers - 1 views

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    Papers, photos, letters, assorted writings and official documents, scrapbooks and film belonging to the Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner collection.
anonymous

Mark Tobey | Panamerican Art Projects - 1 views

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    Pan American Art Projects specializes in art of the Americas with the mission to build a bridge between North and South American cultures by presenting and exhibiting artists from both regions. We deal with emerging to established artists, as well as secondary market paintings, sculpture, and works on paper.In 1990 we started as Galerie Malraux in Los Angeles, California: at that time the gallery focused mainly on Caribbean art. In 1994 the gallery followed its founder to Dallas, Texas, in a transition which marked the beginning of Pan American Art Gallery; the inaugural exhibit was a massive 400-piece show of important modernist Cuban art. By the early 2000's the gallery moved to a 4500 square feet exhibition space in the upscale Turtle Creek area of Dallas; the first show there, a comprehensive view of Cuban photography titled "Cuban Photography - Revolutionary to Contemporary" was named one of the ten best shows of the year in America.Since that time the gallery expanded its reach to North and South America, and promotes contemporary artists of distinction from the Western Hemisphere. In December 2006 we opened as 12,000 sq. ft. compound in the heart of the Wynwood district of Miami, which features multiple exhibition rooms, a video box, on-site storage, a library, and an apartment with a studio for visiting artists. Our first Miami exhibit was a large two-man show of Leon Ferrari and Oscar Bony, both from Argentina. At that time, we modified our name to Pan American Art Projects, to reflect our evolution into a dynamic contemporary art venture.
Maram Abdulaal

Get your Dream Job - 15 Clean & Elegant Resume Templates | iBrandStudio - 0 views

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    The resume of today, to reflect yourself on paper or interactively.
yc c

Yulia Brodskaya : Yulia Brodskaya - 1 views

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    Yulia Brodskaya is an artist and illustrator born in 1983 in Moscow - Russia.  "Typography is my second love, after paper and I'm really happy that I've found a way of combining the two. Having said that, I don't want to exclude non-typobased designs, I'd like to work on different projects." Yulia for Computer Arts
Scheiro Deligne

Greg Kucera Gallery | Seattle - 0 views

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    The Gallery began with a modest group show of artists which included established NW artists such as Alden Mason, Gene Gentry McMahon, Karin Helmich and John F. Koenig. A number of younger artists were quickly added including Mark Calderon, Michael Ehle, Jody Isaacson, Ross Palmer Beecher, and Ed Wicklander. We then began working with Roger Shimomura, an already established artist who began his career in Seattle. The gallery also soon began to show prints and works on paper by Robert Motherwell, Helen Frankenthaler, Richard Diebenkorn, Jim Dine and artists making prints with ULAE, including Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Terry Winters and Elizabeth Murray.
Ian Yang

Custom Paper Toys - 0 views

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    Lovely paper toys for all the kids who refuse to grow up! =D - ian
Benjamin Hansen

2Modern Design Talk - Modern Furniture & Design Blog: Pulp Art - 0 views

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    Paper cut outs of pulp fiction book covers.
Benjamin Hansen

Johnny Yanok - Hello! - 0 views

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    Illustrations cute and playful. Looks like paper cut outs.
anonymous

Handmade Card Making Supplies | Make Your Own Card - 1 views

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    Here is an article that will show your the supplies you will need in order to make your own greeting cards. Helpful tips and information on what paper you will need, homemade envelopes, and materials you need to make cards.
anonymous

Pan American Art Projects specializes in art of the Americans. - 6 views

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    Pan American Art Projects specializes in art of the Americas with the mission to build a bridge between North and South American cultures by presenting and exhibiting artists from both regions. We deal with emerging to established artists, as well as secondary market paintings, sculpture, and works on paper.
anonymous

Historical Art And Painting - Panamericanart - 4 views

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    Pan American Art Projects specializes in art of the Americas with the mission to build a bridge between North and South American cultures by presenting and exhibiting artists from both regions. We deal with emerging to established artists, as well as secondary market paintings, sculpture, and works on paper.
anonymous

Panamericanart | Art And Paintings - 5 views

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    Pan American Art Projects specializes in art of the Americas with the mission to build a bridge between North and South American cultures by presenting and exhibiting artists from both regions. We deal with emerging to established artists, as well as secondary market paintings, sculpture, and works on paper.
Ian Yang

Art Community & Forum : Art Face Off :: View topic - Top 10 Reasons Why Galleries Rejec... - 0 views

  • Too Similar: A gallery looks at the group of artists they represent, much like an artist looks at a painting. It is not so much the individual artist that is considered, but, rather, how that art fits into the existing group. Often galleries are reluctant to take artists that are too similar to an artist they already represent. Too Different: All galleries try to create a niche for themselves by representing artists that are stylistically similar and would appeal to their core group of collectors. If your work is outside the arbitrary parameters they have established, you are out of luck. Too Far Away: Unless you have already established a reputation elsewhere, galleries are reluctant to work with artists outside their regional area. Issues surrounding shipping costs and the inconvenience of getting and returning work in an expedient manner make it often not worth it. Too Fragile/Difficult to Store: Regardless of how big a gallery is, there is never enough storage space. Galleries shy away from work that is 3 dimensional, easily breakable, heavy or hard to handle. Too Expensive: Most artists undervalue their work. But, occasionally I will come across an artist with a totally unrealistic sense of how to price their work. Prices are established by the law of supply of demand (Read Pricing Your Art). If a gallery feels they can not price your work fairly and still make a 50% commission, they will not be willing to take a chance on you. Too Cheap: Artists who only do works on paper, photographers, etc often can not generate enough income from sales to make an exhibition worth it to a gallery. If you have 20 pieces in a show, and each piece sells for $500, and your show completely sells out…your gallery has only made $5000… barely enough to cover the costs of the postage, announcement and opening reception. Too Difficult: Entering into a relationship with a gallery is in many ways similar to entering into a marriage. It's a relationship that needs to be able to endure candid dialog about the things that are often the most difficult to discuss with anyone…your artwork and money. Both the artist and the gallery need to have a level of trust and comfort that will guarantee honest communication. If a gallery perceives you as being a difficult person to work with, they tend to veer away. Too Inexperienced: Many artists start approaching galleries too soon, before their work has fully matured. Most critics and curators say it takes an artist several years after college for their work to fully develop stylistically. Galleries want to make sure that once they commit to you, your work will not make radical and/or unpredictable changes. Even if a gallery LOVES your work, they may want to watch your development over a period of years to confirm their initial opinion. Artists must also have enough work of a similar sensibility to mount an exhibition. Too Experienced: The gallery fear of failure is strong, particularly in this economic climate. Careful to be sensitive to a price point that is right for their audience, galleries may not be financially able to risk representing artists who are farther along in their career, therefore demanding higher prices, than emerging younger artists. Artists with a long sales history of gradually appreciating prices may find themselves priced out of the current market.
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    Something that every artist should keep in his/her mind.
Ian Yang

Computer Arts - Be more creative - 0 views

  • It’s vital to keep your creative juices flowing when fulfilling design briefs, for both your work and your sanity. Industry pros reveal how they stay inspired
  • Computers aren’t everything – screens don’t provide solutions if you stare at them for long enough. Wrench yourself free and investigate relevant media and forms of expression.
  • If you’re working solo, however, work fast and don’t think too much – use sketchbooks to get ideas down quickly. And, when struggling, don’t force ideas; instead, temporarily put a project on hold and work on something else. Projects often then inform each other.
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    "Computers aren't everything" I think that's an incredibly important statement. Drawing with a nice pen or pencil on good paper can get you thinking in a very different way than arranging pixels on a screen. When I'm stuck, or even when I'm not stuck for ideas I find the nearest library and look for the oldest, largest most decrepit books and pull them off the shelf to look at them. There are many gems languishing on forgotten shelves. The other day I found a very large book from the 1920s chock full of beautifully colored prints of Masonic symbols and imagery. I took photos, if anyone's interested...
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