View allAll Photos Tagged rococo
my first work in ps!! i'll prolly laugh at tomorrow, but tonight i'm pretty darn proud. :D
see original capture...
Showing detail of skull, rococo leaf (copied from a cheap-and-nasty picture frame I found lying in the street) and the stone set on the back of the ring.
I cut the picture frame up into individual elements and made rubber moulds from which wax impressions could be taken. The waxes were then combined in various ways to make items of jewellery. This ring uses only one small section of the original frame. (The skull was not part of the frame.)
For a 1-Gigapixel google map with further variants, please see:
Project together with Benjamin Dillenburger
That's as close a name as I can come up with for this. It reminds me of classical heavenly oil paintings but I'm not sure which in particular.
I couldn't help taking a quick photo of Orlanda in this corset before it goes to another RED beauty! I think I will have to make her one she can keep too!
I made these stays from a pattern in Corsets and Crinolines, I added hip gores to the stays to make then a little more comfortable since they were drafted to have a pretty large waist reduction for this style of "corset'
Such a nightmare to sew, but so worth the effort!
This image was taken during a Welshot Chester Academy evening. The theme (or Challenge) this week was to create a set of images that could potentially be used to promote Chester as a photographic location for a single photographer to visit. I chose to pick locations like Coffee shops, Pubs and cocktail bars but also try and include Chester well known architecture in the image.
For more information about Welshot Imaging see their web site here:
I indulged my love for intricate and ornate jewelry in the creation of this unique pendant. Both beadweaving and bead embroidery techniques were used in this piece. The center is a pressed glass button from Czechoslovakia. It is green with an iridescent finish and has a raised floral motif. The button is held in place by a peyote stitch bezel made of 24 K gold plated delicas. Then rows of green, gold and gunmetal beads surround the center out to a final edging of clear rocailles with a gold foil lining that are used in a picot edging. The base of the piece is wool felt and a stiff interface material. These are then backed with soft tan sueded leather. The bail is made of black delicas in square stitch.
Only nymo thread was used in the piece, and the price includes a silky cord necklace in black with a silver plated lobster hook closure that measures 16 inches. This piece was constructed with care and due to the leather and felt base should never be worn when bathing.
Dimensions: the medallion is 1.75 inches (44.5 mm) in diameter with the bail extending .25 inches (6.3 mm) from the top. The cord necklace is 16 inches (406.4 mm). (Please note that the pendant can be removed from the cord necklace.)
Lego modular inspired by rococo architecture. Computer rendering but only existing bricks were used.
Royal/T and Zippercut are pleased to present Rococo Rendezvous, a Masquerade Fantastique that draws inspiration from the 2004 Japanese film "Kamikaze Girls" where the divine luxuries of 18th century France are caught up in the childlike mind of a Japanese teenager.
A mix between a homemade Rococo dress (by Fuchsia) and latex in a park next to a mansion.
Model - Fuchsia
Copyright Robbie Nordin.
Want to see more pictures,visit www.robbiesphoto.com
Location shoot with artist Redd Walitzki at the newly-opened Seattle Art Hostel in Belltown.
August 2009.
Photos by Libby Bulloff.
hostelartcollective.wordpress.com/
Redd designed and painted this goddess on the wall of her room in the Art Hostel. Love the decadence and mash-up of genres.
Helga, my madame sunrise, dressed up in her finest for her turn in the secret room. She desperately wants it for her own...
The chandelier is somewhat hypnotising, but when she looks away from it she finds herself looking into a giant's room... everything is so huge in there, and Helga is sure that she's the only one of the girls that can see it.
~
Custom Blythe by Reina de Salem wearing a dress from DolliesLoveDresses on etsy. The room diorama is by JevriesLovesJodie
Detail of one of the doors of the Archbishop`s palace in Passau. Rich wood tones contrast with the gilt door furniture.