More The Wicker Man nonsense. My extra-derpy Nicholas Cage from my earlier piece is now a brand mascot, paying tribute to another memorable line from that cinematic bee-sting. Would you buy your next bottle of God Damn Honey from this man?
Inspired by the ending of this rather brilliant Wicker Man YouTube Poop.
Original photo by Flickr user TheTruthAbout (cc by-sa)
captchart:
ןɐnʇıɹıds Jamony
Submitted by robtfirefly
CAPTCHArt is a beautiful thing! I made this one. Source images were public domain photos from Wikimedia Commons.
Me as world-renowned and universally-beloved superhero, Italian Spiderman. Unfamiliar? Watch this, read this.
Thrift shop clothes: $8
Fabric paint: $5
Cut-up cat mask: $6
Bagged wig: $10
Dodgy pornstache: model's own
Unlimited admiration and caffè macchiato from every woman who happened to glance in my direction: senza prezzo
Photo by Sidepocket
Way back in 1999, I was attempting to capture frames from a video file on a Playstation 1 disc; I no longer remember which game it was. The process of accessing video from a PS disc in a regular CD-ROM drive was unstable to begin with in those days, and it didn’t help that I really wasn’t sure what I was doing. Instead of grabbing usable screenshots from the video, my wonky software (which I seem to remember being in Japanese with no translation available) and wonkier settings generated four 320x224 bitmaps which, while unrecognizable, were surprisingly pretty.
I’ve been saving the images ever since, hoping to find something to do with them. I haven’t managed to find anything yet, so I stitched the four frames together into one image and am posting it here. Instead of using the Creative Commons License I normally apply to my work, I’m posting this graphic entirely public domain and free of any restriction in hopes that folks might get some sort of use out of this old accidental digital art.
Some more captchart. The 1963 Wostro, the herpderpiest automobile the swinging sixties and a wonky captcha had to offer!
Public domain source images: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Nikola Tesla (July 10, 1856-January 7, 1943)
Tesla, a Serbian-American inventor never fully appreciated in his own lifetime, has in retrospect become known as one of the most important inventors on record. Much of our 21st -century technological environment has its roots in Tesla's work with electricity, radio, and more.
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my September 2015 set Luminaries of the Hacker World.
They have lots of new gTLDs you can put a website on nowadays.
I acquired ascii.bike and put an ASCII bike on it.
Alexander Graham Plane 1978
As the era of novelty telephones took hold in the 1970s, third-party phones of all shapes and gimmicks began finding their way into homes. Most telephone companies were still discouraging the practice of customers connecting third-party phones to their lines, but interestingly-shaped phones caught on regardless. Canadian phone company Northern Telecom addressed the issue with their own cute airplane-inspired phone.
The Alexander Graham Plane, part of Nortel's “Imagination” line of contemporary telephone designs, was one of very few novelty phones of the period to be actively manufactured and made available by a telco.
Acrylic on canvas, 7x5″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
When I learned that Neighborcon's own Travis Goodspeed encouraged attendees to counterfeit the con's Tennessee-shaped badges, I swore I'd make the best Tennessee-shaped badge ever and proudly display it at Neighborcon NYC in December 2009.
When I arrived I found out Travis meant the badge should be shaped like Tennessee the state, not Tennessee the playwright. How embarrassing.
Permanent marker on PVC.
Stromberg-Carlson upright phone 1894
When Alexander Graham Bell’s patent on the telephone expired in 1894, American Bell Telephone Company employees Alfred Stromberg and Androv Carlson went into the telephone-manufacturing business for themselves.
The telephone shown here is Stromberg-Carlson’s first upright desk phone, nicknamed "the Coffee Grinder" by enthusiasts due to its unusual shape and side-mounted hand crank. Few of these unique members of the "candlestick phone" family survive today.
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
Hello there. I'm Rob. This used to be my art blog until I left Tumblr; here's why you won't see me around here anymore. This is my website, you can find the rest of what I do from there. Here's a bunch of social media I do still use. Here's how to contact me directly if you wish, please feel free. All my original artwork posted on this Tumblr is released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Feel free to reuse, remix, etc. any of my stuff under the terms of this license.
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