Qui Croire? (Who to Believe?), a work of anamorphosis art by french artist François Abélanet, is a sprawling mass of grass of sand that appears, when viewed at the proper angle,
Japanese botanical artist Makoto Azuma had my attention when he covered an Aeron chair in green Astroturf. Now, after covering Hello Kitty in moss, he also has my heart.
Why stop at a single Astroturf Aeron chair when you can cover an entire room in shards of recycled green glass? Brooklyn-based artist Mark Reigelman, whose website’s splash page
Poppin is pretty much porn for creative people who work at desks. They’ve got the modern, colorful office supplies I was all over last month, but here they’re
Everybody’s talking about resin today, and if my site behaves itself, I’ll have more to say on the topic tomorrow. Meanwhile, here’s Curiosity, a dapper green fellow with
I love everything about this. Green? Check. Fuzzy? Check. Aeron chair? Check. Domo? OK, well I added that… Japanese botanic artist Makoto Azuma has partnered with furniture designer Herman
These little green army men by Dorothy have a twist. Rather than glorifying the heroic myth of battle, they show the grim reality of life afterward when “the