† non-conformist, hates mediocrity and prefers the underground scene because to her, the mainstream is a devious ploy to kill our senses..
† turned out to be an only child and had always wanted an older brother (thank god for kick-ass 1st cousins)
† best way to be kept sane during times of utter crappy-ness is to fill her head with loud music or simply be with the company of her rare-to-find-in-this-obnoxious-world, dearly loved and amazingly insane friends, as ironical as it may seem... (you guys know who you are..~_~)
† is already spending time with cadavers for mind stuffing, exploring people's insides to fix them and most likely put them a step or more away from "the sickle"; the ultimate event being prepared for; no room for second thoughts; has been rooting for it and time fared her towards it... ("Righteous!!"^_~)
† frequently, her mind transforms into unimaginably convoluted yet essential pieces of substantial conceptions from which a majority of the time, she decides to conceal and keep to herself...
† admires and envies the minds of Anne Rice, Neil Gaiman and Tim Burton (what and how would it take to have their brains fused and implanted in my head??) *Sweet!!
† UP has brought out the best and worst of her to date... and, if fate and circumstance conspire to make it so in a number of rebirths or rewinds, she would not trade it off for anything or even try to miss it...
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
A Mike Dringenberg SANDMAN panel becoming a wall painting.
one of GAEA’S most delightful green gifts to the world… ~_~
Art of the Toilet Paper Roll by JUNIOR FRITZ JACQUET
French artist Junior Fritz Jacquet has been fascinated by paper since a very young age. Among various other paper and cardboard creations, he transforms plain toilet paper rolls into remarkable miniature masks. His technique is inspired by origami, in that it uses a single piece and folds it into a shape, but has a unique smoothness that deviates from the sharpness and jagged edges of origami, creating shapes that are astonishingly human. The masks are sculpted by hand, then coated with shellac and different pigments. A testament to the power of taking something incredibly simple and transforming it into something impressively expressive, each piece exudes a complexity of human emotion conveyed in just a few brilliantly orchestrated folds.