View allAll Photos Tagged MaskingTapes
Some changes to my web site -- This photo & other August Break posts are on my blog: jesshibb.posterous.com. (If you visit jesshibb.com, you can still get to my blog ... It's a fancy launch page now!)
Robin Hines threw a Mardi Gras party. I didn't have a costume until at the last minute (well, 4 hours before to be precise) I decided to make a Cthulhu mask.
The mask itself would be based off an illustration I did last year for Disjecta's Halloween party.
I didn't have enough time to make a mask out of paper mache or plaster and have it dry by the party. I had previously made a couple of masks as promotional material for the Tape Type typeface. I used the same basic technique to make this mask. I added a couple of ping pong balls for the eyes and spray painted the whole thing gold.
Even though the thing reeked of paint fumes, I made it to the party dressed and on time.
ikea kids table and chair set painted and striped with japanese masking tape. more info on blog: thehappyhomeblog.com/?p=1717
Mixed media painting using the "kissy" mouth, a youthful face and some loose and experimental techniques.
One thing Clint likes to do with kittens is to put a roll of tape around their belly and see how long it takes them to wiggle free. It's part of kitten-desensitizing 101. Time to learn dexterity, Beavis! YouTube video of this HERE: www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eXEmiJrKzU
playing.
Beavis the cat, masking tape.
downstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
September 11, 2007.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
... View videos of Beavis the cat at www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ClintJCL&search_q...
Masking tape prototype for my Halloween costume this year: Batman villain The Scarecrow. The hood goes under the high collar.
Papiers: TOGA, Kraft
Masking tape
Chiffres en bois sur mini pinces à linge en bois de chez Casa
Boîtes d'allumettes, ficelle blanche
Not shown: My new Weller soldering iron. Hey! This thing's hot! Like, on the middle setting, it's able to instantly melt that impossible lead-free solder we get at school.
It's amazing how much easier that makes this whole soldering thing. Having a spanky-fresh tip on the iron probably helps, as well.
It's also amazing how crappy the soldering irons that came in our supply kits are. Wow. Anybody need a shitty soldering iron? Free to a cheap-ass home.
Also not shown: my stupid small-based, tall, top-heavy tea mug, which I whacked with my elbow, thereby spilling a very full cup of much-needed tea all over the table, my bag, the floor, my chair, my neighbor's box of stuff, under the soldering iron, etc. Order of rescue operations: moving Celina's things out of the way of the rapidly spreading pool, unplugging soldering iron, standing there looking stupid.
Some changes to my web site -- This photo & other August Break posts are on my blog: jesshibb.posterous.com. (If you visit jesshibb.com, you can still get to my blog ... It's a fancy launch page now!)
Danbo was assisting with the painting today by applying the masking tape to the counter top... helpful little fella, our Danbo :)
a little present wrapped up with eco fabric, envelope made from a vintage craft book, vintage sewing pattern DIY washi tape (the par avion is stamped on white tissue paper DIY washi tape too), and a tape covered clothespin.
Cute massage washi tapes
made in Japan
orange- Thank you, For you
White-Love,Good, Smile, wonderful, special, great'
mint-Happy birthday
This is the newest journal I made for personal use. It's a Trash Book, made almost entirely out of papers that would normally be thrown away (or were thrown away).
The front cover is part of a photocopy.
The back cover is covered with a paper grocery bag, decorated with portions of the same photocopy from the front cover.
The interior front cover has a pocket made from a scrap of paper used in another bookbinding project.
Mismatched signature reinforcements are made from vintage magazine and book pages, photocopies, leftover Canson paper and packaging from things someone sent to me. (The map with masking tape on it was used as wrapping paper.)
The papers on the interior have some edge damage from a miscut. Since I intended this for personal use, I left that there.
The interior pages are 80lb paper, stiffer and thicker than my usual heavy 60lb text weight. I rounded the corners.
128 pages.
5.5" x 6.5" (14 x 16.5 cm)
I made this for myself, but I'm going to put it on Etsy. If it sells before I finish using the last few signatures of my current book, great. If not? Mine! (It'll be up for a very finite time.)
Ok - I didn't actually stalk these two women but when I saw them I did have to take their picture. So don't be surprised when you see them again.
Sun K. Kwak: Enfolding 280 Hours is a site-specific work composed of approximately three miles of black masking tape in the fifth-floor gallery at the Brooklyn Museum. The 280 hours in the title is the artists estimate of the number of hours that it will take her and her assistants to install the work. At the end of the Brooklyn presentation and after photographic documentation, the masking tape will be peeled off the columns and walls and discarded.
The installation is amazing - this image shows the tape crossing glass double doors and the two women walking into another gallery.
a- combining 3 sections of paper. newspaper text newspaper image and sheet music.
b- pull out a page screw it up, flatten it out and tape it back in
ikea kids table and chair set painted and striped with japanese masking tape. more info on blog: thehappyhomeblog.com/?p=1717