BilbliOdyssey recently featured a rather unique children’s book in which a rocket blasts through each scene.
You can actually see and hear the story in a video book on Youtube.
BilbliOdyssey recently featured a rather unique children’s book in which a rocket blasts through each scene.
You can actually see and hear the story in a video book on Youtube.
As long as we’re on the subject of books today, Monster Brains has posted some very unique illustrations from the Belgian Christmas book The Wonderful Journey Of A Christmas Tree dated 1943 by author Joseph C. Boon.
I’m so curious about the rest of this book…has anyone seen it?
Here’s one on my wish list: The Twelve Terrors of Christmas, written by John Updike and illustrated by Edward Gorey.
On Amazon: The Twelve Terrors of Christmas
Scans found in this Flickr set
Suspicious Anatomy just took a flying leap to the top of my book wish list.
This project arose from the combined efforts of writer Wythe Marschall and multimedia artist Ethan Gould (of the Hollow Earth Society).
After staring at a Cognitive Neuroscience textbook continually over the past few months, I immediately became enraptured with Gould’s illustrations.
From the Suspicious Anatomy website:
In the tradition of John Hodgman, David Cronenberg, and H. P. Lovecraft, The Human Cranius explores an alternative anatomy at once mesmerizing and deeply unsettling. Gould and Marschall ask: What do we know about our own bodies? The answer: Very little…
Suspicious Anatomy does not purport to represent or speak on behalf of anything; it seeks rupture with discourses. Or should we say, with the discourses that it, in some ways, reminds us of. Because Suspicious Anatomy is not a discourse, and cannot prove anything. It is pure Surrealism—the mutilation, combination, and recombination of discourses (or, at the molecular level, of images and words associated with those discourses) towards the Impossible Discourse: The (Unconscious) Mind. Or, in our case…? The Unconscious Body?
Click on the images for a slightly larger view and be sure to examine the details and read to the absolutely brilliant labeling.
I have, at times, been known to invent body parts, but could never be quite so adept at illustrating them. I cannot wait to get my hands on this and lose myself in the “physio–psychomological quandaries” of the Shadow Self made flesh.
See more illustrations from the book here.
Of all potential purposes for a saw, I’m surprised they took the “make a life sized fake woman” angle for this ad.

In the many idealizations of beauty I’ve seen from every era, I believe this is the only one that involves having a giant pastry head. When will the media stop setting unrealistic standards?

Victorian photo manipulations…take THAT, Photoshop!

I’ve heard the term “putting on one’s face” but…

I relate to you, 70’s Textbook Girl.

Keep up with science? Don’t mind if I do!

I quite enjoy this Capybara illustration. It’s got AT-TI-TUDE! Wish I knew which artist to credit…

Oh hi, little fella…love your curlicue nostrils.

I refuse to believe that isn’t a real ad because it is entirely valid medical treatment.

And while we’re on the subject of cats, I’ve seen this scratch pad in a few different places and it fills me with extreme joy every time. I will one day hand make this for cats in my life.

50 Watts featured this curious children’s book, written in Hebrew. It is…The Biography of a Hamster.
I happen to think hamsters are adorable. I had half a dozen of them at different times during childhood (who now grace the soil, deep in my backyard). This book is quite unique in its illustrative style. Dare I say…slightly dark.
Looking at the collection of pages made me wish I could actually read the text.
See the rest here.
Remember those wonderful Acme products on Looney Tunes many years ago? Now you can get the catalog.
This little baby buggy tends to circulate every year on various sites. Awww…precious.

I’d like to see real photos of these:

A lovely sculpture by Kate MacDowell:

Ugh…there were always the dreaded houses that dispensed awful Brach’s candy when I was a kid. No one even wanted to trade this stuff.

And arguably even worse…

(I’m not anti-raisin, but this is HALLOWEEN…who wants to gather typical lunchbox fare?)
Definitely an inspirational image for awesome kitschy decoration:

Best passive-aggressive note card ever:

This is either pretty great, or a sad sign made by a dyslexic man named Brian:

Hang on while I hyperventilate because this collection is so fantastic (wish I had the source!):

Not intended for Halloween…but amazing:

Also unrelated, but this octopus looks monstrously friendly. He’s smiling. At you.

October has arrived! I can’t wait to start my Halloween blogging, but I haven’t launched my yearly countdown yet (not everyone is a Halloween freak like I am, so I’m trying to be courteous by including other posts).
Fellow children of the 80’s, remember Ed Emberley? To this day, I still think his Big Orange Drawing Book is awesome.
Just the sight of the cover brings back so many memories! When grabbing the cover image for this post I came across Emberley’s Drawing Book of Halloween!
I can’t believe I didn’t have the Halloween version. It’s going right on the wish list.
If only I could find some of my childhood drawings based on this book to post…
This post goes out to the Father of My Kitties (okay, so the cats are not technically mine, they live in a different house, and I have completely insinuated myself as the Kitty Momma…what of it?).
I bolster the hell out of cat self-esteem on a regular basis. Our boy was the runt of the litter, and now he’s the Alpha Cat of the house. And our girl doesn’t even care that her ass always looks fat in photos. Job well done.