I’ve been waiting almost a year for a new batch of these plush coffee beans! New York sushinator, Andrew Bell, once again teams up with midwest plushinator, Lana Crooks, to make
Matt Alt knows about the Japanese usage of cute mascot characters for all manner of applications. He wrote the book on it, actually. He posted a few examples
Lana Crooks was one of the first artists using plush who really made me see the medium as sculptures rather than toys. The self-proclaimed Plushinator has given form
Gallery1988 really lived up to its meta description of “the nation’s number one destination for pop-culture themed artwork” this past weekend by presenting a double dose of cult
About Cuddly Rigor Mortis 2008 was the year that changed my mind about designer plush. It began with the innocent-enough acquisition of two items: A Curster Yeti by
Wondercon isn’t about toys; it’s about comics: superheroes, Star Wars, cosplayers and comics. Semantics aside, Comic-Con has more toys. That said, ToyCyte scoured Wondercon in San Francisco’s Moscone