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Showing posts with the label flowers

A 100% degradable calligram

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This is a very beautiful calligram that visually carries the meaning of a degradable bag. One of the seven phrases reads: - Si degrada rapidamente con il calore (It degrades rapidly with heat), and another: - Senza rilasciare sostanze dannose per l'ambiente (Without releasing dangerous material in the environment). The visual analogy implies that the bag is degradable with a light breath of air. Thanks to Pharma Bag for its sensitivity to the environment and its choice of a calligram design to enhance their eco-friendly products.

A calligram with... touch!

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Type your word, draw your picture and get a calligram in few seconds with TypeDrawing with just a touch. It is so easy and fun! TypeDrawing is an application for iPhone and iPod Touch. Like calligrams, drawing with letters is what the application is all about. I was amazed the first time I tried it on my husband's iPod Touch! - I typed the sentence, Everything is all right, right now. - I chose a white background paper - I selected the font style, its size, color and opacity - and then just let the intuition flow and drew a vase of flowers, just with my index finger! Then - I saved it in an iPhoto Album - went into iPhoto and sent it directly to my husband as a sign of gratitude for introducing to me such an interesting and fun application. And all within few minutes. On Flickr there is a TypeDrawing Group Pool and it's clear how many people are enjoying and using their creativity with this tool. I am exploring it daily and I am finding it truly amazing. It allows an entirely...

Le bouquet

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Guillaume Apollinaire created the calligram Le bouquet for the catalog cover of his friends’ art exhibition: Peintures de Léopold Survage. Dessins et aquarelles d’Irène Lagut. - Paris, 21-31 janvier 1917. The original publication seems to be a very rare treasure for visual poetry: 12 calligrams, printed in facsimile after drawings by Apollinaire, never before published. More info: - Apollinaire, visual poetry, and art criticism by Willard Bohn - ILAB - LILA

Forsythia

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Finally spring arrived showing its first splendor with the forsythia! I was walking this afternoon and saw the yellow forsythia around the corner... it reminded me the famous concret poem by Mary Ellen Solt, Forsythia, composed in 1965 and published in 1966. “The design of Forsythia is made from the letters of the name of the flowering shrub and their equivalents in the Morse Code. The text is part of the design.” ~ Mary Ellen Solt " Forsythia by Mary Ellen Solt was typographically concretized by John Dearstyne. In the introduction to Flowers in Concrete , George Zadek writes: “Traditionally the typographer has given form and order to words, thus serving both the writer and the reader. His problem is mainly one of clarity of communication, literary meaning, and hopefully aesthetic contribution to the art of the printed page. When publishing concrete poetry, it is sometimes difficult to draw a line between the contributions, as well as the final responsibilities, of the poet and...

Poinsettia, the Star of Christmas

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Text by  Arianna Papini  - Calligram design by Laura Ruggeri Once upon a time there was Laura, a little woman with splendid fairy eyes and, at the same time, far far away, there was the mom of Laura. A great space divided them, but they had in common a subtle magic ability: they were able to buy the stars. [ continue... ] PS - Inspired by a true story.