Culture Buzz Russian artists Alexei Lyapunov and Lena Ehrlich, a.k.a. People Too, hand-craft stories of “people, scissors, paper.” The results are amazing.
Style Buzz I have a special place in my heart for people like U.K. artist Jennifer Collier. She takes things that you and I would just throw away and transforms them into amazing pieces of art.
I can't get enough of these. To learn more about the artist and her stunning work, click here. (via 1800recycling.com)
Culture Buzz Lucie Thomas and Thibault Zimmermann are Zim and Zou from Nancy, France. Back to Basics is their latest creation. Each piece is made with sustainable paper and hand cut reusing even the tiniest pieces for details to avoid waste. (via theuniblog.evilspacerobot.com)
Here's some amazing and wonderfully geeky paper art by Deviantart user Botjira. Paper never looked so cute and nerdy. Visit their gallery here.
Culture Buzz St. Louis-based artist Julia Feld uses only knives, tweezers, and scissors to transform ordinary books into extraordinary pieces of art. Here's just a few examples from her Tumblr.
Culture Buzz So we've all tried to fold a little football out of our lunch money. But Won Park's work puts our grade school origami to shame. Some of these pieces I appreciate for their beautiful craftmanship, others because they're just a tad geeky. If you want to see more, check out Park's DeviantArt gallery.
Culture Buzz Cheong-ah Hwang has created several images out of layers of paper, to give off a 3D effect. She focuses on a number of subjects, like animals and fairy tales, but the best ones are the super geeky ones. (Via Bite Daily.)
Culture Buzz Finally, something I can do with my money besides spend it. These paper masterpieces are the work of origami master and minimalist, Won Park. Another fun fact about Won is that he lives in a garbage truck, but not just any garbage truck. It’s the nicest garbage truck you’ve ever laid your eyes upon. (via)
This video makes the fatalities in the game seem almost cute and kid-friendly…. except not really.
Culture Buzz Artist Taras Lesko has always had a passion for creating something with his hands. One paper model consists of about several hundreds of individual parts, a couple of hundred letter sized paper sheets, and is over 3 feet tall.