Your dog may know more about contemporary art than you think. Richard Jackson’s “Bad Dog”, taking a wizz of yellow paint on the Orange County Museum of Art, California. (see more: http://goo.gl/gd1qp)
It’s finally here – the machine that will bring order to your home, the Skittles sorting machine. It uses RGB sensor to read the colour and directs it to the needed tube. This is order! (link, video)
A sculpture from series “People of the river” along the Singapore river in Singapore by Chong Fah Cheong. Makes you want to jump into water, then you look to the water and think “What a pretty sculpture”. (photo)
Typically when you think of a greeting card, you associate it with something thoughtful, deep, uplifting and cute. Someecards, however, have stuck to “deep” only. Deep deep sarcasm, that is.
Founded “by Brook Lundy and Duncan Mitchell and a dollar and a half-assed dream,” Someecards parody the sentiments found in the traditional Hallmark greeting card. As stated on their website, today it “may or may not be the greatest thing since ecards,” and the best part is that you can create your own funny greeting cards using their e-card generator.
I put together a selection of funny ecards based on their most popular list with a couple of my picks from pinterest.
Dove's advertising campaigns in recent years have focused on celebrating what the skin care company calls 'Real Beauty' - railing against the blemish-free, unscrupulously Photoshopped images of super-slim models used in rivals' ads and magazine covers.
Now Dove has sneakily gone on the attack with this guerrilla marketing campaign targeting art directors, graphic designers and photo retouchers. The company has created a fake Photoshop action that claims to add skin glow to portraits but actually undoes manipulation.
The phoney action has been made available through Reddit and other channels frequented by the design community, but regardless if anyone actually is fooled by their prank Dove will feel its point has been made.