drawball.com DaWanda iScribble.net - Draw - Chat - Gallery 11 Undiscovered Website Ideas to Steal and Make You Rich It’s no secret: great ideas make the web spin around. Community-based sites and web applications are rapidly becoming hot property. Young entrepreneurs are making startling amounts of money with simple ideas that connect people and places. The dream is a simple one: with careful planning and some spare time, someone just like you can take a smart concept, add some glitz and make a fortune. It turns out, they’re right where you’re standing. 1. The mini pitch: “Buy and sell work online.” What it is: You know all those job boards you see littered around the web? How it works: Designers, developers, writers, and anyone else wanting work can post their request, together with the percentage or fixed fee they’d pay to someone providing a lead. Why it’s hot: More people than ever are turning to the web as a source of work. Where the money is: Take a commission when work is successfully placed, or charge a monthly fee to either buy requests or see contact details. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.
ÇizBakalım - Çizim Tahmin Oyunu C U T + P A S T E Welcome to Manga Masters.com Carved Book Landscapes by Guy Laramee (click images for detail) For the better part of three decades multidisciplinary artist Guy Laramee has worked as a stage writer, director, composer, a fabricator of musical instruments, a singer, sculptor, painter and writer. Among his sculptural works are two incredible series of carved book landscapes and structures entitled Biblios and The Great Wall, where the dense pages of old books are excavated to reveal serene mountains, plateaus, and ancient structures. Of these works he says: So I carve landscapes out of books and I paint Romantic landscapes. Laramee’s next show will be in April of 2012 at the Galerie d’Art d’Outremont in Montreal.
Watercolor Female Portrait | FindInspirations.com Silvia Pavarini, Italywebsite: silviapavarini.blogspot.com Monsieur Qui, Pariswebsite: monsieurqui.com Stella im Hultberg, USAwebsite: art scrap blog Yoco Nagamiya, Japanwebsite: yoco-nagamiya.jp Miwa Kaburaki, Japanwebsite: miwakaburaki.com Medienpunk/Frederic, Germanywebsite: flickr.com/photos/medienpunk Marianne Goldin, USAwebsite: flickr.com/photos/mariannegoldin Jacklyn Laryea, Ghanawebsite: jackielaryea.com Julia Bereciartu, Spainwebsite: juliabe.com Robin Wang, Chinawebsite: flickr.com/photos/rgmu11 Debora Usagi, Brazilwebsite: debbyusagi.deviantart.com Raphael Vicenzi, Belgiumwebsite: mydeadpony.com Egon Schiele, Austria, (1890-1918) My associations with watercolor painting are: ‘ephemeral’, ‘delicate’, ‘sensual’.
Main Page - Wikifashion The Art of the Personal Mission Statement Around this time last year a good friend of mine invited me to participate in a 31-day process of developing a personal mission statement for 2010. It sounded like a daunting task at first, but I ended up doing it when the friend who invited me agreed to be my planning buddy — step one of the process. Granted, a 31-step process is pretty involved, so let’s boil it down to 5 key steps, adapted from Accelerated Success. Identify strengths What are you great at? Identify opportunities Next think about what type of activities (both work and extracurricular) you excel at because of your strengths. Identify assumptions What do you assume about the way the world works? Identify desired legacy Your desired legacy is what you want to be known for in life, which is one step removed from nailing down your personal mission statement. Identify personal mission If your desired legacy is what you want to be known for in life, your personal mission statement tells how you will accomplish your legacy.
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