Teagan White

Teagan White

Teagan White

Teagan White

Teagan White

Teagan White

Woodland creatures, warm tones and fun patterns are among some features of Teagan White’s work (also seen previously in my post about illustrated iPhone covers). She’s a designer and illustrator from Minneapolis, USA. She has a great eye with a very flexible range of style that extend to children’s books and even the most minute details of anatomical illustrations – but of course, her whimsical side first caught my eye!

Thrill Murray

Bill Murray colouring book

Bill Murray colouring book

Bill Murray colouring book

Belly Kids just published a coloring book dedicated to William James “Bill” Murray, featuring the man in scenes from some of his movies – Ghostbusters, Caddyshack, and of course, Groundhog Day.

They’ve worked with 24 illustrators to bring you the coloring book that’s dedicated to the man in all his cinematic glory, and it’s aptly called Thrill Murray. Didn’t like the color of that robe he had on in the show “Lost in Translation” the first time? Color in your own then – go nuts!

Tokyo Zoo Project

Tokyo Zoo Project

Tokyo Zoo Project

Tokyo Zoo Project

Tokyo Zoo Project

Tokyo Zoo Project

Draw geoglyphs on Tokyo’s roads with your bike! That’s the premise of the Tokyo Zoo Project that creates bike routes that look like animals with the help of a GPS system, cartographers and bikers from Tokyo. With a total coverage of 607.67 km covered, this has got to be one of the most interesting crowd-sourced bike trail project I’ve seen so far.

Users were first asked to send in tweets about what animals they’d like to see on the map, to which the cartographers then set out to trace these animals, and then fed them to a Sony Nav-U device where bikers could retrace the steps. (As expected, these devices sold really well during the period.)

It’s a great marketing and promotional strategy for Sony, and a great case study for those who are interested in pushing their brands in the age of collaboration and technology. And the fact that they’re utilizing the ever-so-subtle idea of using art to power the project? Fantastic.

Via Spoon & Tamago