View allAll Photos Tagged postitnotes
What we did to Walt's Jaguar on Friday (not that I was there or anything...).
Read the story and view the video from ABC World News .
This photo was a Yahoo! pick of the day. It is also now featured in a "Ripley's Believe It Or Not" book.
Now the 3M Post-It people have copied it without permission.
View the entire set including links to sites from around the world that have written about them.
UPDATE: All of these images are posted under a Creative Commons Attribution license, which means that you may post these photos on your site or in an email provided that you ALWAYS ATTRIBUTE AND LINK back to the source (this page is fine).
Got to love post it notes
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.
© All rights reserved
Study of the humble but vital 'sticky note' for "Pink on White Background" theme:)
©Kings Davis 2023
Please do not use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or
any other media without my explicit permission.
Community art collage created by Adrian Wallett made from 183 Post-It Notes from around the World from many artists.
This project took me around 10 months to begin and finally complete. I used the power of the internet to gain Post-it Note artwork from across the globe from a wide variety of very talented artists.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone that took part and helped create such an amazing collage.
If you like this project and the finished collage please leave a comment below.
If you like this collage and would like to see more original artwork by me please view my full art set using the following link:
www.flickr.com/photos/adrian_wallett/sets/72157594473031125/
Please let me know what you think of my art, all comments are welcome.
You can learn more about and purchase some of my artwork from the following website:
Based on detailed scientific evidence from some of the world's top paleontologists. On a post-it note!
For the end of the work week, I decided that bringing my camera to my shift would be a nice change, to have my 365 photo done before 6 pm and for something fun to do on a slow close.
The coffee shop I work at is fully stocked with doodles and crafts, post it note works of art can be found on most surfaces. I think we have the most creative team of baristas out there.
Elizabeth David (1913-92) was a highly influential British cookery writer who revolutionised home and professional cookery across the world. The Guardian newspaper described her as ‘leading British cooking from the greyness of [wartime] austerity to an exotic world of fresh herbs and garlic’, and today her Mediterranean-inspired recipes and books are still in print.
She took her work very seriously, so much so that she bought old and antique recipe books and scoured them for information. When reading them, she wrote Post It notes to herself as memory joggers.
After her death, a number of her rare book possessions came to auction – and thanks in part to a grant from the Friends of the Nations' Libraries charity, the Senate House Library (part of the University of London) acquired one of them, complete with her Post It notes.
And here it is: on the right is a 1720 edition of Edward Kidder’s Receipts of Pastry and Cookery, and on the left, her notes which were found inside the volume (they have been removed from the book to protect its pages from the adhesive). ‘Torta called pizza by the Neapolitans 441’; ‘Agrestala 533’; ‘Soup of prugnoli & other dried mushrooms 286’; ‘390 broccoli with sugo di melangole’.
The title page of Kidder’s recipes is a delight: ‘For the Use of his Scholars. Who teaches at his School in Queen Street near St Thomas Apostles On Mondays, Tuesdays & Wednesdays, In the Afternoon. ALSO On Thursdays, Fridays & Saturdays, In the Afternoon, at his School next to Furnivals Inn in Holborn. Ladies may be taught at their own Houses’.
They really don’t make ‘em like that any more... but thanks to the Senate House Library and the FNL, it's still possible to see 'em!
Forty years on from its origin as 3M's Press 'n Peel, the Post-it note, so frequently used around computer screens to hold phone numbers and passwords(!), now somewhat superseded by the mobile phone Memo app.
two of my co-workers designed and built this mosaic of the king out of post it notes over the memorial day weekend.
more info from the artist on his site.