Cordies Executive: This desktop organizer and cord manager is made from heavy aluminum and keeps unruly cables and devices organized. UBoard Smart: It's a multi-functional organizational tool made of tempered glass table that sits over the keyboard of your computer. It features 3 USB ports, a cup holder and an iPhone/smartphone holder. You can organize your notebook, pen, calculator, etc. Modo - Modular Desktop Organizer: The modular desktop organizer features 16 long and 4 short aluminum pins that you can arrange as you need on the bamboo board. It allows you to organize your iPad, smartphone, pens, clips, rechargers etc., on the desktop. Desk Amigos: Designed by Vaca Valiente, made from used leather, it keeps your desk organized. Toothy Cable Tidy: A simple cable management solution that can be attached to the edge of the desk or shelf to hold your cables. The different sizes between the teeth allow for cables of varying widths to be held securely. Large Desk Organizer: This handmade organizer is perfect for organizing quite a number of different items. Cablox Cable Management System: It sticks under your desk, and you can run your cables through it, shorten, fasten and group them. myKeyO Keyboard Organizer: This multimedia computer keyboard features a built-in stand for iPads and smartphones. Below the keyboard you have space for keeping your everyday office supplies. Plug Out Outlet Organizer: Now with this organizer you can keep your plugs and cords in an organized way. Woganizer Desk Organizer: The Woganiser desk organizer by Dutch label Wohood is a streamlined oak structure that keeps your iPad, smartphone, pen, notepad and other work essentials in one secure and visible place. Bench: Bench neatly organizes pens, pencils, erasers, stylus, USB, smartphones and smart devices. i/o Desk Organizer: The i/o, or input/output, desk organizer comes from Kaiju Studios; it consists of modular ceramic and walnut elements which for customization can be plugged into a sectioned felt and walnut base.
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Call herself “re-maker”, UK-based artist Jane Perkins takes inspiration from found objects and working them into something new. In her “Plastic Classics”, she successfully re-create recognizable iconic paintings like DaVinci’s Mona Lisa and portraits of stars like Albert Einstein and Nelson Mandela with those neglected itmes such as buttons, toys, shells, beads, jewelry, LEGO pieces, etc. As Jane mentioned, she use anything of the right size, shape or colour to create those portraits – no colour is added, everything is used exactly ‘as found’! Her work keeps your eyes attached from a distance view and when you go closer, a miniature textured world of forgotten knick-knacks is waiting for you to explore.
By hammering thousands of nails onto a canvas, artist David Foster creates stunning portraits of celebrities, animals and scenery via varying the solidity and shading of nails. Originally an architect, Foster’s love of technical drawing has matured into using just hammer and nails stippling to create shadow and light. The level of realism Foster achieves with the nails is unbelievable. Each piece begins with a photograph, which Foster reproduces in ink stippling. Then he enlarges the drawing to use as reference of nail position, and starts hammering away.
Greece-based artist Charis Tsevis is a brilliant visual designer who is renowned all over the world for his creative minds and has done work for companies like Nike, PepsiCo, Toyota and IKEA. “We are living in a wired world. No matter how wireless technologies have developed. We need those cables, lines to transfer electricity and data”, said by Tsevis. Due to his fascination about this wired world, he created intricate illustrations feature a maze of wires tangled together to form people and animals. Those perfectly arranged wires, from cord to cable, are snaking out towards the edges in his illustrations and magically create a sense of motion. Tsevis says, “All of them have to do with the relationship between the network and the human body and spirit.”
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AuthorNelly - internet marketer loving design Archives
January 2021
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