Amazing People // Aimee Mullins ” Confidence is the sexiest thing a woman can have. It’s much sexier than any body part . “Aimee Mullins, Amazing people . Appointed as the latest L’oreal Paris spokesperson, Aimee is astonishingly amazing Athlete /Model / Actress / Superwomen . Her impact on modern society and influence on future generations is [...]
Archive for July, 2011
Amazing People // Aimee Mullins
Posted in Amazing people, Applied Design., Art & Design Fair, Fashion, Photography, tagged Actress, Aimee mullins, Amazing people, Athlete, awesome people, Guggenheim Museum in 2003, Model, Smithsonian, Superwomen, TED, The Cremaster Cycle, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the NCAA Hall of Fame, the Tate Modern, the Victoria and Albert Museum on July 22, 2011 | 11 Comments »
Digital Campaign , Uniqlo for Cannes
Posted in Applied Design., Branding and Communication, Consumersim, Event, Inspiration and design, Retail and fashion, Trends, tagged advertisement, cannes 2011, digital campaign, uniqlo on July 13, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
World’s first Online Waiting-Line Uniqlo, one of our most favorite fashion forward Japanese brand has always been on the forefront of innovating digital campaigns. Tadashi Yanai, the man behind this formerly suburban discount apparel store , turned Uniqlo into the new cool Japanese fashion alternative. From the first store in the streets of Harajuku to [...]
RON MUECK
Posted in Applied Design., Art & Design Fair, Exhibition, Inspiration and design, Spaces, tagged "In Bed", (Seated Woman) (1999), A Girl (2006), Art Surreal, Australian, Crouching Boy in Mirror (1999–2000), Dead Dad (1996–97), hyper-realist, Hyper-realist sculptures, In Bed (2005), Mask II (2001–2002), Mask III (2005), Ron Mueck, sculptor, Spooning Couple (2005), Two Women (2005), Untitled (Big Man) (2000), Wild Man (2005) on July 6, 2011 | 8 Comments »
RON MUECK Ron Mueck is an Australian hyper-realist sculptor working in the United Kingdom. Hyper-realist sculptures are striking and they show no traces of the artist’s hand, which allows each work to create its own psychological effect – from defiance to puzzlement to sorrow – without an apparent mediator. The artist’s sculptures not only engage the viewer in an [...]























































