With the world we're living in now, it feels like we're all just trying to hang onto our souls. Everything seems to be getting more extreme and everyone keeps wondering, 'WHAT NOW? What's next?'. By the same coin, the only constant on this record is that you never know what's going to happen next: every song is its own aquarium, its own little miniature world built around whatever I was feeling and thinking at the time.Disc 11. Earth Sign - Brittany Howard2. I Don't - Brittany Howard3. What Now - Brittany Howard4. Red Flags - Brittany Howard5. To Be Still - Brittany Howard6. Interlude - Brittany Howard7. Another Day - Brittany Howard8. Prove It to You - Brittany Howard9. Samson - Brittany Howard10. Patience - Brittany Howard11. Power to Undo - Brittany Howard12. Every Color in Blue - Brittany Howard
Kendal Murray’s miniature sculptures create tiny worlds using every day objects like glass teapots, grass-covered purses, mirrored makeup compacts, shoes etc. In this post we are covering a mixture of two of her exhibitions, Flights of Fancy and The Collector. The compositions and the titles she gives them, resemble the soothing feel and look of the old nursery rimes, children's stories and the surreal imagery they came with. Ambition - Acquisition. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Backyard Chase - Race - Apace. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Breakfast Time - Just In Time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Bye-Bye - Reply - Awry. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Discreet - Sweet Deceit. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Disguise - Surprise. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Downriver - Deliver. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Esteem - Dream. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Face Off - Show Off. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Flower Sellers - Glasshouse Dwellers. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Forsake - Double Take. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Fun Run - Dry Run. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Hide And Seek - Sneak - Technique. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Hope Chest - Professed. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Pond - Respond - Abscond. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Quest Addressed - Rest - Ingest. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Seaside Stride - Pride Confide. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Sublime Climb - Eye Rhyme. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Surprise Spies Compromise. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Zoom - Consume - Boom. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
Making and watching videos have become a way of life for most people. According to YouTube, individuals around the world watch more than six billion hours of videos each month adding up to about an hour per each person on earth. Every minute approximately 100 hours of video are uploaded to the site. If you have an inte
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
Dive into the world of the "Malady Maidens" as our Kickstarter campaign goes live! Explore stunning miniatures, for collectors and gamers!
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
Kendal Murray’s miniature sculptures create tiny worlds using every day objects like glass teapots, grass-covered purses, mirrored makeup compacts, shoes etc. In this post we are covering a mixture of two of her exhibitions, Flights of Fancy and The Collector. The compositions and the titles she gives them, resemble the soothing feel and look of the old nursery rimes, children's stories and the surreal imagery they came with. Ambition - Acquisition. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Backyard Chase - Race - Apace. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Breakfast Time - Just In Time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Bye-Bye - Reply - Awry. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Discreet - Sweet Deceit. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Disguise - Surprise. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Downriver - Deliver. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Esteem - Dream. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Face Off - Show Off. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Flower Sellers - Glasshouse Dwellers. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Forsake - Double Take. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Fun Run - Dry Run. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Hide And Seek - Sneak - Technique. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Hope Chest - Professed. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Pond - Respond - Abscond. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Quest Addressed - Rest - Ingest. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Seaside Stride - Pride Confide. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Sublime Climb - Eye Rhyme. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Surprise Spies Compromise. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Zoom - Consume - Boom. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
Fiddle Oak is a 14 years old photographer based in Natick, USA. He produced a series of self portraits and created a world of miniature and fairy-tale
When Pierpont Morgan acquired his first medieval manuscripts at the end of the nineteenth century, he laid the foundation for a collection whose quality would rank among the greatest in the world.
The home of your dreams is within reach, so long as you build it in 1:12 scale.
Let them eat tiny cakes! Just when you think the world of miniatures couldn’t get any more impressive, you stumble upon the exquisite work of June Clinkscales. The Californian miniature artist has the kind of artisanal skills that we might have believed were almost lost to the world – not to mention, she’s working on…
TokyoBuild creates miniature replica models of everyday buildings that make up the fabric of Tokyo: kobans, Showa-era izakayas, shops and more.
I've spent 5 years creating this project called "Tiny Wasteland". The series feature miniature figures placed next to everyday objects in order to create the illusion of microscopic worlds.
Greek artist Gregory Grozos is on a quest to prove that pocket watches can do much more than just tick. They can fit entire worlds inside them. "I call my creations 'miniature worlds' because that is what I exactly aim them to be," Gregory writes. "I try to make each work of art as detailed and complete as a tiny world would need to be in order to be called a world."
Artist Kendal Murray builds miniature mixed-media sculptures that take viewers on a playful and imaginative journey. She is using tiny toy figures and objects to create small worlds filled with creative memories, daydreams, and fantasies. The scenes are taking place on unexpected objects like on top of a small purse, or on one side of […]
Bigger doesn't always mean better, as Japanese artist Tatsuya Tanaka proves with these tiny dioramas that he makes for his ongoing Miniature Calendar project.
Another year, another 365 days of miniature glory from Tatsuya Tanaka (previously). On a daily basis for the past seven years, the prolific Japanese miniature artist has shared unique images of imagined scenes created using the simple combination of everyday objects, tiny model humans, and his boundless imagination. (For anyone keeping track, that’d be over 2,500 dioramas.) Crinkle-cut potato chips become desert sand dunes, spiral-bound notebooks delineate swimmers poised to compete, and books filled with sticky notes create an urban skyscraper scene. More
Bigger doesn't always mean better, as Japanese artist Tatsuya Tanaka proves with these tiny dioramas that he makes for his ongoing Miniature Calendar project.
I’ve spent years creating this project called “Tiny Wasteland.” The series features miniature figures placed next to everyday objects in order to create the illusion of microscopic worlds.
Artist Kendal Murray builds miniature mixed-media sculptures that take viewers on a playful and imaginative journey. She is using tiny toy figures and objects to create small worlds filled with creative memories, daydreams, and fantasies. The scenes are taking place on unexpected objects like on top of a small purse, or on one side of […]
Japanese artist Tatsuya Tanaka stands out with his playful tiny dioramas. He creates miniatures out of ordinary everyday items, giving them a new meaning. Here sugar cubes, plastic bags, and cups, among other items, become icy mountains, mysterious sculptures and many other things you can imagine.
Artist Gregory Grozos is known for creating fantasy worlds within tiny everyday objects—and the results are amazing.
Gregory Grozos crée ses propres mondes miniatures depuis maintenant sept ans. Incroyables et très détaillés, ils apparaissent comme différents contes, chac
Weeds are Back: little people in the urban jungle in Strasbourg by Vincent Bousserez.