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Most Amazing Miniature Food Artworks by Shay Aaron | The Wondrous Design Magazine - StumbleUpon. Shay Aaron is a brilliant artist from Israel who makes the most astonishing miniature food jewelry. These foodstuffs look so beautiful that we would desire to eat them. Actually, there’s a whole market out there for miniature food. Not actual stuff you can eat, but beautifully hand made designs of steaks, burgers, pies, vegetables, eggs and pretty much food artworks you can think of. Comments comments. How to write shape relief alphabet. [VIDEO] - StumbleUpon. The Most Awesome Waste of Time - Snail Art. Painting on water. "Fresh Guacamole" Melted Crayon Canvas Art. Your source of daily updated funny pictures and gifs.

The Illustration &Design World of Zach Johnsen - StumbleUpon. Making Unrealistic Things Look Possible in Photoshop CS4 - Layers Magazine | Layers Magazine. Perhaps one of the most satisfying gratifications of designing with Photoshop is the ability to create the impossible—making unrealistic things look possible. Here we’ll combine dancers with splashes to create a unique “splash dance.” 1 [WHITE BACKGROUNDS WORK BEST] Like many techniques in Photoshop, this one will be easier if the photo you choose is on a white background.

We’ve chosen this istockphoto.com image of a leaping dancer. (Toward the end of the tutorial we’ll look at what’s involved if the background isn’t white.) 2 [FIND SOME SPLASH PHOTOS] A quick search of “splashes” and “paint splashes” on istockphoto.com provides a bunch of nice splashes. 3 [DRAG-AND-DROP] Drag-and-drop the splash photo onto the photo of the dancer. 4 [FREE TRANSFORM; LOWER THE OPACITY] With the splash layer active, press Command-T (PC: Ctrl-T) for Free Transform. 8 [REUSE THE SPLASH WITH WARP] We’re going to reuse the same splash on the dancer’s hand, but we’ll make it look different.

Pen and Ink Drawings | Fubiz™ - StumbleUpon. Des illustrations très impressionnantes par l’artiste Sagaki Keita basé et vivant à Tokyo. Ces oeuvres sont composés de milliers de personnages et de dessins en tout genre, formant alors une image principale. L’ensemble de ses travaux sont à découvrir dans la suite. Three-Dimensional Goldfish. First: watch the video. Japanese artist Riusuke Fukahori paints three-dimensional goldfish using a complex process of poured resin. The fish are painted meticulously, layer by layer, the sandwiched slices revealing slightly more about each creature, similar to the function of a 3D printer.

I really enjoy the rich depth of the pieces and the optical illusion aspect, it’s such an odd process that results in something that’s both a painting and sculptural. Wonderful.