
The Book Cover Archive Hamish Hamilton: Five Dials Five Dials is a magazine published by Hamish Hamilton, edited by Craig Taylor. To be kept up-to-date on new issues, please consider subscribing to the mailing list. An RSS feed is also available. Distributed in Portable Document Format (PDF), Five Dials is best downloaded, printed out and enjoyed (we hope) away from the computer. If your web browser doesn’t offer the ability to read and print PDFs, simply download the files linked below. Five Dials Number 31 11.4Mb PDF Tricks of the Light. Five Dials Number 30 1.4Mb PDF and 126K Mobile The Camus Issue. Five Dials Number 29 3Mb PDF Weight to Lift. Five Dials Number 28 4Mb PDF Heroes / Heroines / Other. Five Dials Number 27b 2Mb PDF Pedagogic Poems. Five Dials Number 27 5 Mb PDF Things Simmering. Five Dials Number 26 6 Mb PDF Berlin. Five Dials Number 25b 2.4 Mb PDF The Cork Fiction Issue 2: Cork Harder. Five Dials Number 25 1 Mb PDF The Big Corking Fiction Issue. Five Dials Number 24 2.8 Mb PDF The ‘B’ Issue. Five Dials Number 23 Five Dials Number 22
thaeger Incredible and Scary 3D Pencil Drawings by 17-year old Fredo Realistic pencil drawings are always interesting. It is nice to watch how artist has managed to draw something like it was photographed by camera. However, the plenty of the pencil drawings you have seen by now probably cannot be compared with the following drawings which are literally mind-blowing.Those drawings were made by Fredo, a 17-year old guy from Chile who has found an interesting way to create 3D drawings.Fredo has started to think more seriously about his drawing skills when he was 15. He has learned from some already known artists in this field like M.C.Escher. He also says that he is inspired by the work of Rembrandt, Alex Grey and Beksinki. When he was asked about the time which he needs to produce one of his drawings, he said that some of his drawing have took him months while he was drawing them. Here you can see some of his 3D realistic pencil drawings which look like they were photographed with camera rather than drawn with hand.
Metal Sculptures | Andrew Chase « Gillybeans’s Blog To continue the trend of focusing on designers and artists, i’d like to give you a brief overview of the inspirational work of Andrew Chase. A renowned name in the world of nature-inspired artwork, his mechanical giraffe is made from transmission parts, electrical conduit and plumbing pipe. Connected with a complex mesh of gears and levers, the giraffe is designed to look and work in a realistic manner. These metal sculptures beyond the everyday imagination, are the result of the work of Andrew Chase. The mechanical Elephants are made out of automobile transmission parts, electrical conduit, pipe, rod and sheet steel in about three and a half months’ time, they measure at 36″ X 36″ X 18″ and weigh in at about 85 lbs. The mechanical elephants are more than sculptures, given their maneuverability – all the joints are movable and they lock in place; the ears can move back and forth, while the trunk can be lowered or raised. References:
IdeaFixa the artist and his model La Geek Attitude Recave Blog: Web Design, Illustration, Photography, Graphics, Videos, Cool Products, Digital Design Inspiration Gillybeans’s Blog Design You Trust