Archive for March, 2007

Error: Stickers Awesome!

Monday, March 26th, 2007

Windows Vista is here!!!!! Wow! Im so excited! Prague has recently been taken over by a blitz of advertising telling everyone to say “wow” about the latest operating system. I for one am not saying wow, and am annoyed by these advertisements that seem to follow me at every turn. So I decided to use [...]

Interesting article about the myth of American women opting out…

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

Interesting article about the myth of American women opting out of the workforce to stay home to raise families. Most of the stories focus on white, married, upper-class women with high-earning husbands, maternity leaves are getting shorter, and bias and inflexibility in the workplace forces many women to “choose” to stay at home with the family. “The American idea of mothering is left over from the 1950s, that odd moment in history when America’s unrivaled economic power enabled a single breadwinner to support an entire family. Fifty years later we still have the idea that a mother, and not a father, should be available to her child at every moment.” (link)


Originally
from kottke.org


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 22, 2007, 9:46PM

BRANDED

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

Afro-American Express, 2004Part of Hank Willis Thomas’s Branded series.
Via Bezembinder.

Originally from we make money not art [...]

Prank of the Month: Fake Gucci Ad

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

A few years back, I bought ad space in magazines for Matador. To place an ad, I’d call an ad rep, reserve the space, and send them artwork. Shortly after the ad came out, they’d send me a copy of the ad along with a bill. So I was psyched to see someone making creative use of this system: A guy in Switzerland, pretending to be a representative from Gucci, called up a weekly paper and reserved a two-page spread. He then sent in a fake ad of himself naked from the waist up, flanked by a bottle of Gucci…


Originally
from Stay Free! Daily

by Carrie McLaren


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 22, 2007, 1:12AM

Stitch for Senate

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

0kniiiiop.jpgStitch for Senate, launched on the day of the 4th anniversary of the US invasion of Iraq, invites knit hobbyists to craft helmet liners for every US Senator in an effort to encourage the politicians to support the troops by bringing them home.

The helmet liner pattern was adapted from a support-the-troops initiative for soldiers stationed in Iraq. Once they receive their helmet, senators can opt to send it to a soldier in Iraq or Afghanistan. Charitable knitting during wartime has been a tradition since the American Revolution. During WWII in particular, women, men and even school-age children were invited to Knit for Defense and keep troops warm.

The aim of Stitch for Senate is to start a dialogue between both sides of the Iraq war debate. “I would like people to be thinking and talking about the war a little more, and this may be one way of doing it,” explains Catherine Mazza, founder of microRevolt and adjunct professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

The website will compile testimonies from knitters seeking to understand what knitters express through wartime knitting: charity, allegiance, patriotism, resistance, radicalism, etc. and use the tradition of political organizing within knitting circles as a space for storytelling, discussion, exchange and protest.

00sticjjh.jpg

Related: Victory Gardens, one of Amy Franceschini’s most recent projects re-imagines the Victory Gardens of World Wars I and II for the present political and ecological situation.

Via networked_performance and Orlando Sentinel.

More knitting stories: Follow the flocks, Pyuupiru’s costumes, Burrower knitwear, Shocking crochet, Delirious knitting show at Craft Council, Subversive knitting, Guerrilla knitters, etc.


Originally
from we make money not art

by Regine


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 20, 2007, 8:18PM

Fold your own kids’ furniture

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

Cory Doctorow:

Foldschool has a handful of downloadable PDF patterns for foldable, functional kid-sized furniture: a chair, a stool and a rocker.

Link

(via Craft)



Originally
from Boing Boing

by Cory Doctorow


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 21, 2007, 9:24PM

Big book of Unamerican subversive stickers

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

Cory Doctorow:

Sticker Nation: The Big Book of Subversive Stickers Volume 1 is a new book from Srini Kumar and Disinformation. Srini is the creator of Unamerican.com whose stickers (i.e., I WORSHIP SATAN HA HA HA and BOY DOES HIGH SCHOOL EVER SUCK) are classic Internet schwag. Srini is incredibly prolific, coming up with sticker designs at a prodigious rate — he also operates Sticker Nation, where you can roll your own Unamerican-style stickers.

The book is something I’ve never seen before: 400+ vinyl paper bumper stickers, in sheets, in alphabetical order, bound in a big trade paperback. You get hundreds of Unamerican stickers for $15, ready to peel and stick (along with the hilarious back-cover disclaimer: “Please don’t sticker up public spaces or other people’s property without permission. Use this book with respect for other people’s property or you might get into trouble. We are not going to be held liable for your zany vandalism schemes and you are not a freak property damage robot. Use this book correctly for maximum effect. Thanks for reading, we’re on your side.”)

The Volume 1 in the title suggests that there are more editions to come — I eagerly await them. However, I’d prefer if future editions contained some sheets of small stickers, appropriately sized for laptops, phones, etc — how many bumpers does the average stickerer own?

Link


See also:
New book on kooky counterculture stickers by Srini Kumar


Originally
from Boing Boing

by Cory Doctorow


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 21, 2007, 5:04PM

[American Girl]

Tuesday, March 20th, 2007
Hey Everyone,

For a project tor another class, Francisca Caporali and I made this fake commercial for American Girl. Check it out!
Laura

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vf5iX52DBUs


Originally
from Culture Jamming IMA

by Laura Chipley


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Dec 22, 2006, 2:08PM

Amnesty ads: serial killers got due process, Gitmo detainees don’t

Sunday, March 18th, 2007

Xeni Jardin:


Here is a series of ads from Amnesty International (in Spanish) asking why prolific American serial killers such as John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy and Pee Wee Gaskins received due process, but Guantánamo detainees have not. All three ads are made to look as if they were written in blood.


Originally
from Boing Boing

by Xeni Jardin


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Mar 16, 2007, 7:45PM

an ad that should be parody

Sunday, March 18th, 2007




this ad seems like a culture jam, but it’s an actual ad from the NY times website!


Originally
from Culture Jamming IMA

by snw


reBlogged

by the status corporation

on Dec 2, 2006, 12:53AM