French artist Sophie Lécuyer crafts worlds that exist in the in-between—spaces where the real and the surreal merge, where shadow and light tell stories without a single word. Her black-and-white series, a striking departure from...
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Illustrations by Molly Bounds
Denver based illustrator/print artist Molly Bounds creates comic and zine influenced prints with symbolic depictions and colorful portraits. See some selected works below: More Molly Bounds here.
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Burberry Prorsum Pre-fall 2015 Lookbook
Burberry Prorsum’s Pre-Fall 2015 Lookbook serves up warm, rocker chic with a tailored edge. Fur accents, animal prints, and carefully structured silhouettes combine to create a collection that feels luxurious yet edgy
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Illustrations by artist Kristofer Porter
Kristofer Porter’s illustrations live in that perfect in between space where humor and discomfort shake hands. Based in New York City, the artist creates cartoonish characters that feel familiar at first glance, then quietly disturbing once you spend more time with them. The drawings are bright, graphic, and deceptively simple. But the longer you look, the stranger they become. Faces stretch just a little too far. Expressions feel locked between emotions. Bodies exist in awkward proportions that resist normality.
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ASOS S/S 2014 Lookbook
The prints are unapologetically cheeky. Cat motifs, pug faces, and heart patterns cover the fabrics, turning each piece into a statement. There’s a sense of humor woven into the styling, but it never overshadows the craftsmanship or the clean lines of the garments. The collection feels youthful and approachable, celebrating fashion as a way to express personality.
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Illustrations by Julia Trybala
The figures in Trybala’s work often appear detached, bored, or mildly unimpressed, expressions flattened just enough to feel intentional. Faces are rendered with a kind of charming indifference, eyes heavy-lidded, mouths barely reacting. That emotional restraint becomes the hook. The characters feel self-aware, as though they are in on the joke but not interested in explaining it.
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Ikenaga Yasunari – The Japanese Art of Nihonga Redefined
“Using the simplicity of Indian ink and linen canvas Ikenaga Yasunari has captured a simple serenity in the the faces of his female portraits.This calm sensuality is highlighted by the richness of their surroundings. Yasunari’s Japanese heritage has inspired a style of painting which is characteristic in his work. This ancient technique of Nihonga is a traditional Japanese art form using a Menso brush and ink. With this Yasunari has successfully captured an essence of the past with a pallet of muted tones , but has injecting a modern twist to each piece with his use of pattern and cloth.” source: