(Source: absentmindeded)
(Source: absentmindeded)
(Source: rusttee)
lnop:
Enamel note books by Sue Brown
She uses her own photographs of early entomological collections making them into enamel transfers.
(via fuckyeahbookarts)
Detroit’s Famous Renaissance-Style Parking Garage
This parking garage used to be a big theatre;
‘When it opened in 1926 at a cost of $5 million, the Michigan Theater was one of the largest in the state, seating over 4,000 people. Serving as a traditional theatre, concert hall and movie house, the venue boasted 10-foot crystal chandeliers, mezzanine seating for black tie guests only, and a magnificent gilded lobby, four stories high and covering 1,000 square feet. Suffice to say, the Michigan was a marvel of the entertainment world and symbol of Detroit’s manufacturing preeminence.’
Photos by Jim Garrett.
Amanda Nelson collected 40,000 pieces of junk mail, folded and bundled them together.
(via artistjournals)
Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris - Henri Labrouste, 1862-1868
“Maison Givenchy”, Paris (France), Spring of 1956…
The French aristocrat and fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy photographed by David Seymour with his muse Audrey Hepburn and Georgina (his seamstress), during the tests of the wedding dress created for the wardrobe of Audrey in “Funny Face” (1957).
(via at-le-petit-cafe)