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Showing posts with label pop culture art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pop culture art. Show all posts

Burton's 2014 Star Wars Snowboard Collection For The Young Shredder




Burton and Lucasfilm have teamed up once again. This time for a new series of 8 Chopper Star Wars Snowboards, a Darth Vader version of the Grom Snowboard Boot and a Star Wars Boy's Anon. Boba Fett Helmet and Anon. Boba Fett goggles.



The 2014 Chopper Snowboards, designed for youths, have a beginner-friendly convex base and are made for even the lightest weight rider. For parents, the Riglet accessory attaches to the nose of the three smallest sizes to tow little ones around until they are comfortable enough to try the bindings.

The 2014 Star Wars Chopper Snowboards:









The Star Wars Darth Vader Grom Boot:


anon. Boy's Boba Fett Rimes Helmet:


anon. Boy's Boba Fett Tracker Goggles:


Shop the youth's 2014 Star Wars X Burton collection here.

The 35 Best Balloon Pics From The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.




Miss the parade this morning? Don't fret, I've compiled (and cropped, colored or altered) 35 photos for a good look at most of the balloons from this morning's 2013 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York for your enjoyment. And here they are.

Hello Kitty:


Adventuretime with Finn and Jake:


Buzz Lightyear:


The Elf On The Shelf:

Julius:


KAWS:


Kermit the Frog:


Papa Smurf:


The Pillsbury Doughboy:


Pokemon's Pikachu:


Sonic The Hedgehog:


Snoopy and Woodstock:


Spiderman:



Spongebob:


Toothless (From How To Train A Dragon):


Wizard of Oz:


Macy's own Santa and Elves balloons:



Images are courtesy of Reuters, Getty, AP, Macy's Official Twitter account, Twitter and Instagram and most have been cropped or altered for color and clarity. Note that not all the parade balloons are shown in this post. Where I can attribute the photos to individuals, I have done so below. If your photo is in this post and I've inadvertently forgotten to give you credit, please contact me and it will be amended immediately.

Enjoy and Happy Thanksgiving!

Photo Credits:
kaws instagram photo by JAMIE OSHEA ‏@SupertouchArt
pillsbury doughboy pics by CookingContestCentrl ‏@CCCentral and Brian Fitzgerald ‏@ExaGridDba
Sonic instagram photo by App Battleground ‏@appbattleground
Pikachu pic by Wise Witch ‏@sapienveneficus
Macy's santa pic by WPTV ‏@WPTV
Macy's elves pic by Krissy Vann ‏@KrissyVann_BTT

ARCHICINE: Famous Movie Architecture As Modernist Illustrations.




Artist and illustrator Federico Babina, best known for his Archipix, a series of well-known architects and their buildings rendered as pixellated 8 bit graphics, has now turned architectural icons of cinema into ARCHICINE, a series of modernist posters.

Personally, I prefer these to any of his other work because they combine two of my favorite things, Architecture and Film, into aesthetically appealing artworks. And he did not disappoint, choosing several of my personal favorites to execute - from John Lautner's Chemosphere House in Body Double to the fictional home in Hitchcock's North by Northwest.

Most of the homes in these movies (and depicted on Babina's posters) are actual architectural structures while others are sets and a few are computer generated. Where possible I have attributed the architect or the history of the building.

A Single Man. Directed by Tom Ford. (1949 Glendale residence by architect John Lautner):


North by Northwest. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock (a fictional home created for the movie)


L.A. Confidential. Directed by Curtis Hanson.(Lovell Heath House in Los Feliz by architect Richard Neutra)


Zabriskie Point. Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni (House designed by architect Paolo Soleri)


The Big Lebowski. Directed by Joel Coen (Sheats-Goldstein House by architect John Lautner)


Rear Window. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock (a giant set built at Paramount Studios)


Le Mépris. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard (modernist home in Casa Malaparte, Capri, Italy by architect Adalberto Libera and has since fallen into disrepair)


The Million Dollar Hotel. Directed by Wim Wenders (The Rosslyn Hotel at 100 West Fifth St. in downtown Los Angeles was designed by John Parkinson and now serves as low-income housing)


Body Double. Directed by Brian De Palma (John Lautner's Chemosphere House)


The Fountainhead. Directed by King Vidor (image depicts the fictional Wyland Residence designed by the main character in the film, architect Howard Roark, played by Gary Cooper)


Star Wars. Directed by George Lucas  (set design and computer generated imagery)


The Incredibles. Directed by Brad Bird (the computer animated home was an inspired mash up of popular mid-century modern architecture by architects Eichler and Wexler)


Moonrise Kingdom. Directed by Wes Anderson (The Conanicut Island Light, also known as Conanicut Island Lighthouse, was built in 1886 in Rhode Island was used as the Bishop family home exterior in the movie)


Dogville. Directed by Lars von Trier. (filmed in three locations in Sweden, house unknown)


The Party. Directed by Blake Edwards (the 1968 movie was filmed at an unknown apartment building somewhere in Los Angeles and on the United Artists lot)


Mon Oncle. Directed Jacques Tati. (The home in the film, Villa Arpel, was a set entirely built from scratch by painter Jacques Lagrange.)


The Man Without a Past. Directed by Aki Kaurismäki. (the container house was constructed in Helsinki for the 2002 movie)


images courtesy of Federico Babina via Archdaily  Some location information courtesy of IMDB and movie-locations.com

A video of Babina's Archipix, if you are not familiar with these and wish to see them:


Babina's Archipix are available to purchase as posters here at Society 6

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