View allAll Photos Tagged kintsugi
Part of a shooting for my luthier friend Nico Lenoci's new custom bass, now heading for Norway. Shot at Pecora Nera Pub in Cassano delle Murge, Bari, IT.
Custom wedding band - iron, 18karat gold. The theme I was given was "Kintsugi" a Japanese technique for fixing broken pottery with lacquer resin dusted or mixed with powdered gold. Here it is inlay referring to Kintsugi.
Behind the scene of Kintsugi Collection (by Marco Modulo)
Hairstylist: www.instagram.com/moduloeducation/?hl=it
Kintsugi: The Art of Embracing Imperfection
Kintsugi is a traditional Japanese art form that highlights the aesthetic and philosophical significance of embracing imperfections. When an object breaks, its repair through Kintsugi can make it even more beautiful and personal. By using lacquer mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, the cracks and flaws are transformed into unique features, telling a story of resilience and renewal. This practice teaches us to appreciate the history and beauty in the repaired, celebrating the journey of transformation.
Poem:
In broken pieces lay the story,
Of shattered dreams and fading glory.
With golden seams, we mend the past,
Creating beauty meant to last.
From fractures bloom a brighter hue,
Imperfections cast anew.
Each line a testament, strong and true,
To life's embrace of old and new.
Haikus:
Cracks filled with gold shine,
Mended hearts and souls align,
Beauty in decline.
Broken pieces glow,
Golden veins in art bestow,
Healing we bestow.
Symmetra
Traveling to Ayutthaya
"Kintsugi: instead of hiding something broken, celebrate it. This should be how we interact. With respect. As
welcomed friends. Trying to understand…and be understood."
Based on the Marammat skin for Symmetra, featured in the "Stone by stone" short story.
This hero answered the #OverwatchCollab call.
Choose your heroes:
■ Ramattra - by @jack_engineer489
■ Reinhardt - by @cindar__block
⁍ Reaper - by @ems_Mocs
⁍ Junrat - by @bruh_i0nicles
⁍ Symmetra - by @petersheikah
✚ Mercy - by @dv_mocs
✚ Brigitte - by @macchio_the_creator
✚ Zenyatta - by @carecreations_
A collab by @spare_parts_community
Play of the game: @dv_mocs for the edits
www.instagram.com/p/Cr7zbakIeka/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
The world could always use more heroes.
This Yin Yang pair of OOAK art dolls is a concept me and my friend Naomi have been planning for years. They are inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold. The albino twin will be hers and I will get to keep the dark resin beauty to bind our friendship together forever.
This project has given me strength to get through this horrible year, so full of loss, fear and missed opportunities. Kintsugi reminds me that we are not broken. We can learn and grow from our negative experiences, and become better people for it.
Commissioned OOAK dolls. Not for sale. Both Inamorata 3.0 dolls share the Nsia head sculpt, one in Milk and the other in Coffee resin.
Poster Print by artist Martin Howard
Kintsugi (金継ぎ?, きんつぎ, "golden joinery"), also known as Kintsukuroi (金繕い?, きんつくろい, "golden repair"),[1] is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, a method similar to the maki-e technique.[2][3][4] As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.
My wife's aunt who lives in Japan sent us a little pottery pot in the post. It didn't survive, but it did give an opportunity to try this out...
Week 23 (11/6/22)
Designer Lotte Dekker (NL) developed a new way of gluing porcelain based on kintsugi, an old Japanese technique from the 15th century in which porcelain is repaired with gold leaf.
credit: Lotte Dekker
I love it when other folks riff on things you've worked on.
These images are by @Unpixelled on the Digital LEGO Designers Community Discord. Unpixelled had the original idea for a kintsugi custom material. I helped figure out how to use the Voronoi node to create the cracks. Then Unpixelled took over again to create this amazing Stone + Kintsugi custom material.
The other thing I love is when LEGO becomes the jumping off point for other artistic approaches. You'll never get this with real LEGO pieces, but virtually...you can go anywhere your imagination takes you. So cool...so cool!
© All rights reserved. www.marcomarassi.com
Use without permission is illegal.
Please don't use this image on Websites, Blogs or other Media without my explicit permission.
This Yin Yang pair of OOAK art dolls is a concept me and my friend Naomi have been planning for years. They are inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold. The albino twin will be hers and I will get to keep the dark resin beauty to bind our friendship together forever.
This project has given me strength to get through this horrible year, so full of loss, fear and missed opportunities. Kintsugi reminds me that we are not broken. We can learn and grow from our negative experiences, and become better people for it.
Commissioned OOAK dolls. Not for sale. Both Inamorata 3.0 dolls share the Nsia head sculpt, one in Milk and the other in Coffee resin.
This Yin Yang pair of OOAK art dolls is a concept me and my friend Naomi have been planning for years. They are inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold. The albino twin will be hers and I will get to keep the dark resin beauty to bind our friendship together forever.
This project has given me strength to get through this horrible year, so full of loss, fear and missed opportunities. Kintsugi reminds me that we are not broken. We can learn and grow from our negative experiences, and become better people for it.
Commissioned OOAK dolls. Not for sale. Both Inamorata 3.0 dolls share the Nsia head sculpt, one in Milk and the other in Coffee resin.
Opsætningen af "Kintsugi - Gyldne kropsreparationer" går nu ind i sidste fase. En lille udstilling fuld af vidunderlige detaljer, fx dette lille miniaturehørerør i messing. Monteret præcist så delikat som det fortjener af vores dygtige konservator @medicalmuseionconservator #kintsugi #medmus --via Instagram ift.tt/2gNVQfD
Rachel Ho works mainly with wheel based ceramic work, throwing mostly with porcelain. “I am drawn to its delicate and translucent nature. My aim is to make work that evokes a sense of beauty and mystery. Just as ancient pots have told stories for thousands of years, I aim to use my pots to tell stories of healing and redemption.” These works were created as a response to the diagnosis of a close friend with cancer and reflect on the Japanese art of Kintsugi a concept of highlighting or emphasizing imperfections, visualizing mends and seams with the addition of pure gold to celebrate the healing and story brought about by our wounds, brokenness and flaws.
The pots are made from porcelain and unglazed to create a delicate and vulnerable quality.
Rachel is passionate about telling stories, growing up in Northern Ireland she has always known the power of stories from early childhood. She studied Applied Arts in the University of Ulster. Rachel’s love for ceramics has taken her on a journey around the world, training with Irish potters in the picturesque village of Kilkenny; exploring wood firing pottery in the Gowers peninsular; and spending 6 months experimenting with different pottery techniques in the South Island of New Zealand.
Rachel currently lives in Macclesfield with her husband and baby daughter.
El mundo se encarga de agrietarnos, de llenarnos de fisuras, y es allí donde reside para nosotros un crisol de posibilidades; la cicatriz se convierte en una ocasión para enfrentarnos al mundo.
This Yin Yang pair of OOAK art dolls is a concept me and my friend Naomi have been planning for years. They are inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold. The albino twin will be hers and I will get to keep the dark resin beauty to bind our friendship together forever.
This project has given me strength to get through this horrible year, so full of loss, fear and missed opportunities. Kintsugi reminds me that we are not broken. We can learn and grow from our negative experiences, and become better people for it.
Commissioned OOAK dolls. Not for sale. Both Inamorata 3.0 dolls share the Nsia head sculpt, one in Milk and the other in Coffee resin.
This Yin Yang pair of OOAK art dolls is a concept me and my friend Naomi have been planning for years. They are inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi, mending broken pottery with gold. The albino twin will be hers and I will get to keep the dark resin beauty to bind our friendship together forever.
This project has given me strength to get through this horrible year, so full of loss, fear and missed opportunities. Kintsugi reminds me that we are not broken. We can learn and grow from our negative experiences, and become better people for it.
Commissioned OOAK dolls. Not for sale. Both Inamorata 3.0 dolls share the Nsia head sculpt, one in Milk and the other in Coffee resin.
Poster Print by artist Martin Howard
Kintsugi (金継ぎ?, きんつぎ, "golden joinery"), also known as Kintsukuroi (金繕い?, きんつくろい, "golden repair"),[1] is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, a method similar to the maki-e technique.[2][3][4] As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.
Gravity helped modify this and gave me the opportunity to really puzzle it together and add a homage to the Japanese art of Kintsugi.
Poster Print by artist Martin Howard
Kintsugi (金継ぎ?, きんつぎ, "golden joinery"), also known as Kintsukuroi (金繕い?, きんつくろい, "golden repair"),[1] is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, a method similar to the maki-e technique.[2][3][4] As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.
Mend Piece by Yoko Ono at Andrea Rosen Gallery pleas for peace and evokes the Japanese art of kintsugi.
via Instagram www.instagram.com/p/_LYRwEmGpe/