The meticulously crafted cardboard, glue and toothpick robo-creations of Melbourne-based artist Greg Olijnyk.
New works here.
The meticulously crafted cardboard, glue and toothpick robo-creations of Melbourne-based artist Greg Olijnyk.
New works here.
Marvellous, antiquated, over-elaborate contraptions sculpted from cardboard, timber and tearing paper by Australian artist Daniel Agdag.
All the pieces feature in an upcoming stop-motion short entitled Lost Property Office.
Previously: Magnificent
Incredibly detailed laser-cut architectural pop-up cards by Bogdan Zolochevsky. available for €12.62 each at ColibriGift.
Refold is an adaptable, foldable portable and recycalable cardboard standing-desk created by New Zealand based designers Fraser Callaway, Oliver Ward and Matt Innes – a simple, cheap and clever innovation currently (and understandably) overfunded on Kickstarter.
The design was shown in action last month as part of a TEDxWellington presentation.
Flying machines and their attendant infrastucture from an exhibition entitled The Principles of Aerodynamics by Australian artist Daniel Agdag.
Sculpted from cardboard by eye with no blueprints and no plans by Agdag, who just gets to work on his unforgiving medium with scalpels and glue.
Using cardboard, paint, and foil, french artist Benadetto Bufalino has created ‘la Ferrari sur voiture sans permis’.
Completely functional with cut out windows, it slides over the top of any small car and is – you’ll agree – virtually indistinguishable from the real thing.
Balloon (2010): a lovely cardboard and fabric short by Eric Tu that will make you happy, then sad.
Sorry.
Given away last week as a press freebie at the 2012 Fuorisalone design expo in Milan, this cardboard camera – soon to be sold in IKEA stores – has a USB connector and can hold up to 40 photos on internal memory.
And, inevitably, two weird-looking extra ones you weren’t expecting.