Japanese jewelry artist
Shinji Nakaba
has crafted a wonderful line of wearable sculptures that features
remarkably tiny skulls and faces carved into tiny pearls and other found
objects.
According to Nakaba, no material is more valuable than another.
(translated)
I am making jewelry from recognition as “wearable sculpture” I use not
only precious metals and stones but also something usual,such as
aluminum Beer can or plastic bottle,or even some discarded materials.
I’m dealing all the materials equally no matter how precious or not precious they are.
Items can be purchased through
Nakaba’s online store.
images via
Shinji Nakaba
via
Magnifico,
Bored Panda
More Related Laughing Squid Posts
Artist
Paolo Curcio craves tiny bas-relief sculptures into coins---a
traditional art form known as the hobo nickel. Curcio's coins feature
intricately detailed hobos, skulls and a variety of pop culture
characters. Plastic castings of his works are available online. Here's
our previous post on Skull Nickels. photos via Paolo Curcio…
December 27, 2013
Similar post
Oregon-based
jewelry designer ModernFlowerChild handcrafts gorgeous clear resin
jewelry that contains real flowers, seashells, leaves, and other organic
materials. The jewelry is available in a variety of forms, including
bracelets, rings, and earrings. ModernFlowerChild sells her work on
Etsy. Her jewelry is also available at Faerie Magazine. And more photos…
February 11, 2015
Similar post
In
his spare time, Turkey-based engineering student Recep Alçamli carves
incredibly tiny yet remarkably detailed sculptures in the graphite of
pencils. He has more sculptures posted on his Facebook photostream. We
previously posted about similar pencil graphite sculptures by Dalton
Ghetti. photos via Recep Alçamli via Bored Panda
October 8, 2014
Similar post
0 التعليقات:
إرسال تعليق