Check out some of our favourite wearable art designers inside issue 023 of Beautiful Bizarre Magazine including Phillip Valdez. . Get your copy: Stockists > beautifulbizarre.net/stockists Shop Online...
After spending a couple of hours surfing the net looking for inspirational and unusual designers/artists I finally found one that took my breath away. The amount of work that has gone into her costumes is incredible. She uses a lot of wire work which you can't notice from afar, but once you see the bodices up close its amazing that amount of precision is possible. Seeing these just make me want to get the pliers and copper wire out and give it a go. I imagine it will take a few years of practice to get it up to this standard though. The other point that drew me to this artist is how young she is, at 18 she won the supreme wearable art award with the entry pictured below, this was after having 10 years of experience at making these wearable art pieces! Gradually getting more advanced of course, I would be gobsmacked if an 8 year old could manipulate wire at this standard, then again Mozart composed his first piece at the age of 4. Her Website My second thought when seeing these garments (my first was wow...) was that the amount of sterling silver wire used must have cost a bomb...so of course I had to find out how much it was. For just a metre its £6.70. Here are a couple of her other pieces that caught my eye: If you think these are pretty cool then you should check out the world of wearable art website here! The imagination thats gone into these picese is incredible.
I have always desired a lightweight, pliable version of porcelain and stained glass, to bring my creations to the next level, so I took it upon myself to create Porcelain 2—my own lightweight wearable porcelain and stained glass.
Wearable Art 2012, now on display at Copley Place, features 36 garments, each crafted by fashion design students from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design undergraduate and fashion certificate […]
I'm Rachel Sigmon, a wearable art designer, and SFX makeup artist. I have been creating wearable arts and headpieces for the last 6 years. And doing makeup for the last 12 years. I love working with various mediums and materials for my designs. I am 100% self-taught. I have a knack for creating an inspiring interpretation, whimsy and fantasy works.
Wearable Art 2012, now on display at Copley Place, features 36 garments, each crafted by fashion design students from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design undergraduate and fashion certificate […]
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I have always desired a lightweight, pliable version of porcelain and stained glass, to bring my creations to the next level, so I took it upon myself to create Porcelain 2—my own lightweight wearable porcelain and stained glass.
I have always desired a lightweight, pliable version of porcelain and stained glass, to bring my creations to the next level, so I took it upon myself to create Porcelain 2—my own lightweight wearable porcelain and stained glass.
30 ideas originales para poder hacer tu disfraz para estas fiestas. Con poco dinero, trabajo y habilidad, podrás hacer todos estos disfraces.
The fashion world often likes to blur the lines between what constitutes art and couture. New Zealand's World of WearableArt (WOW) show didn't hold back in showcasing the wacky.
Sonja Bäumel 's work is a synthesis of art, design, craft, fashion and science.Sonja studied Fashion Design at the Fashion Institu...
Designer and artist Heidi Lee crafts surreal wearables, garnering a reputation for her "Endless Echo Hat" that features a cast, repeating version of her face. Since making its debut a few years back, the work has seen new evolutions and iterations. Otherwise, Lee toys with form and convention in her progressive pieces.
There's a trend on Instagram that has models pointing their cameras toward the ground, obsessed with taking pictures of their feet.