Zoeken in deze blog

zaterdag 23 augustus 2014

Krieg und Verbrechen

From CEM ULUG, Turkey, but living in Germany

Feed the planet, catalogue


A zine in a box, issue 6











Compilation zine in a box developed by PC Tictac in Germany

Patrizia's blog on this project and list of contributors issue 6:



Angela Behrendt, Germany
Bifidus Jones, USA
Carlos Iglesias Botana, Spain
Cesar Reglero Campos, Spain
Cheryl Penn, South Africa
Christian Alle, France
Eduardo Cardoso, Portugal
Elke Grundmann, Germany
Fabrice Riviere, Belgium
Guido Vermeulen, Belgium
Heinz W. Lotz, Germany
Henning Mittendorf, Germany
J
ürgen O. Olbrich, Germany
Kazuri Murakami, Japan
Lamberto Caravita, Italy
Maurizio Follin, Italy
Roland Halbritter, Germany
Saffron, Spain
Svenja Wahl, Germany
Tiziana Baracchi, Italy
Walter Pennacchi, Italy
Wilma Duguay, Canada
Ptrzia(TICTAC), Germany

Other blogs on mail art from Patrizia are:

Mira mira mira



From Miguel Jimenez, Spain

The outcome of world war 2, you said

























Postcard size Collage GV mailed to Otto Sherman in the US

About The people's Observer, on Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%B6lkischer_Beobachter

(it was the journal of the NSDAP, so the nazi party in Germany)

donderdag 21 augustus 2014

Portrait Mania










From Moan Lisa, USA

Actual events

From Jean-Pierre Comes, France

Friends and Faux Stamps


From Valery Shimanovski, Russia
Blog to  follow this artistamp project:
http://friendsandfaux.wordpress.com/


























My add in this chain:
 5 cents I wanna meet Jane Doe stamp (GV)

dinsdag 19 augustus 2014

1914-2014: ring the alarm bells



















More creations from Otto Sherman, USA
The alarm bell words are from me (GV)













The waters of Lake Erie























From Tofu, USA

a note on Lake Erie:

The greater part of its southern shore was at one time occupied by a nation known to the Iroquois League as the "Erielhonan," or the "long-tails," a tribe of Indians from which the lake derived its name. This name is always mentioned by the early French writers as meaning "cat"; Lac du Chat means "Lake of the Cat." Many attribute this reference to the wild cat or panther.