The post Chin Up! Laura Blythman’s Art Will Lift Your Spirits appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>Indeed, judging by her playful portfolio there seems to be a lot of drawing, cutting, and pasting going around. There’s also a lot of color (mainly pink). According to Blythman, her process includes covering big sheets of watercolor paper in a variety of colors, with the added copper or gold leaf. Blythman then cuts the sheets up and rearranges them, employing paper collage techniques.
“I’m drawn to color because it just makes me so happy, it never fails to lift my mood,” she says. So much so, in fact, that her choice of color dictates her art piece rather than the other way around. “When I’m creating new work I decide on a color palette first,” she stressed. “Always. At present, I can’t get away from neon pink and peach.”
With almost 70k fans on Instagram and clients that include anything from start-up businesses to high profile international brands, her creative recipe seems to have worked. You’d want to follow her ins and outs.
The post Chin Up! Laura Blythman’s Art Will Lift Your Spirits appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Alberto Pazzi Proves That Pink is the Color of Passion appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>But if art is his vehicle, color, and more specifically the color pink, is his gasoline. Recognized for his signature pink, Pazzi’s illustrations are undeniably fresh (because let’s face it, the trendy use and overuse of millennial pink isn’t about to go anywhere soon).
“The things I paint are very universal,” says Pazzi, noting that common themes in his work include: women, clowns, and ghosts. “In my recent work I’ve used them almost like self-portraits,” he adds, “but the image of a clown, or a ghost drinking on its own in a bar… these are universal feelings that strike you even if you don’t speak the same language or whether or not you’ve had the same experiences—everyone can relate to them in a way.”
According to Pazzi, his work isn’t hard to understand. “To me, if I have to explain them then I’ve failed as an artist,” he adds. Indeed, with a background in graphic design, his approach to illustration is fairly straight forward. Humor is also a big part of his work, adding a playful edge to his pink creations.
The post Alberto Pazzi Proves That Pink is the Color of Passion appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Chin Up! Laura Blythman’s Art Will Lift Your Spirits appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>Indeed, judging by her playful portfolio there seems to be a lot of drawing, cutting, and pasting going around. There’s also a lot of color (mainly pink). According to Blythman, her process includes covering big sheets of watercolor paper in a variety of colors, with the added copper or gold leaf. Blythman then cuts the sheets up and rearranges them, employing paper collage techniques.
“I’m drawn to color because it just makes me so happy, it never fails to lift my mood,” she says. So much so, in fact, that her choice of color dictates her art piece rather than the other way around. “When I’m creating new work I decide on a color palette first,” she stressed. “Always. At present, I can’t get away from neon pink and peach.”
With almost 70k fans on Instagram and clients that include anything from start-up businesses to high profile international brands, her creative recipe seems to have worked. You’d want to follow her ins and outs.
The post Chin Up! Laura Blythman’s Art Will Lift Your Spirits appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Alberto Pazzi Proves That Pink is the Color of Passion appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>But if art is his vehicle, color, and more specifically the color pink, is his gasoline. Recognized for his signature pink, Pazzi’s illustrations are undeniably fresh (because let’s face it, the trendy use and overuse of millennial pink isn’t about to go anywhere soon).
“The things I paint are very universal,” says Pazzi, noting that common themes in his work include: women, clowns, and ghosts. “In my recent work I’ve used them almost like self-portraits,” he adds, “but the image of a clown, or a ghost drinking on its own in a bar… these are universal feelings that strike you even if you don’t speak the same language or whether or not you’ve had the same experiences—everyone can relate to them in a way.”
According to Pazzi, his work isn’t hard to understand. “To me, if I have to explain them then I’ve failed as an artist,” he adds. Indeed, with a background in graphic design, his approach to illustration is fairly straight forward. Humor is also a big part of his work, adding a playful edge to his pink creations.
The post Alberto Pazzi Proves That Pink is the Color of Passion appeared first on MobiSpirit.
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