Tables, chairs, trays, wall-art... mosaics, decoupage, etched glass, sea shells, solder... Think it, I've probably done it :) Glass, Paper, Glue, Metal, Paint, Passion AND Good Times-- thats what I call mixed media. For questions, comments and requests, email glasspaper.scissors@gmail.com

Galleria 1712




Joined the Galleria1712 in Wickerpark-Bucktown area of Chicago this May. Here's my booth in its early stages of modeling. The next couple images are those after completion of the painting and staging.
To read more about Galleria1712, please visit  http://www.galleria1712.com/ 

Old World Tees and Posters

Calcutta Poster and T Shirt design


Calcutta Poster and T Shirt design 

Calcutta: POSTER


Photographs (c) Kolika C. 2006

VOICES Conference 2007, GWIS : POSTER

Promotional poster for Voices Conference 2007



same in monotone 

Graduate Women in Sciences (Inspirational) : POSTER


Cliparts and quotes
collected by GWIS members 2006-2007

New York Rock-- POSTER
























Photographs of New York City and its Hard Rock Cafe, messages in words and pictures created for an essence that is New York.
Poster

Logos and thumbnails





Nanritam: Community development organization






  Twisted Arts by Kolika (for my painted and etched glass work)




Thumbnail for travel blog on Chicago
Photograph of "quote" and "skylne" (c) Kolika C 2008
Quote from John Hancock Observatory.








Thumbnail for Toranna: Wine Consulting business.
Website http://toranna.com/ (c) Kolika C. 2008








(check back for updates)




Pesty

This is Pesty, the germ; and he was marching towards a kid's reading book.

Bad Day Wool Art

3-D wool art base of the 'sad kid' from 'Bad Day'

Honest Food T-shirt entry

My entries in the Honest Food campaign.
#1
What an honest way
to start your day




#2
Honest with the buyer,
Honest with the body

Panels

A typical sidebar that I use in 'Conjugal' my Wedding Collection.

Oriental designs-- Kolka style from Bengal, India. 


Symmetric soft curves and floral imprints but sticking to 'NO FLOWERS' policy. 

Celtic Knot


The symbol of a never-ending knot signifies an eternal bonding to me.
Fragile threads, young and foolish, playing with each other, tying themselves in something imperceptible to them; a knot so beautiful, equal and symmetrical; and one so strong and undoable, protecting in its cocoon the seed of a new family.

I use this a lot as borders, in my wedding collections, especially Conjugal.

A Wedding and the Marriage

 This was a free hand sketch on glass see old post. This was later digitized and added on to, to go as a main emblem on the wedding card and on the envelop.

Loved it so much, used it for our wedding (see below)

silk and spice

From my Wedding Card collection--'Conjugal'. 


Oriental designs-- Kolka style from Bengal, India. 


Symmetric soft curves and floral imprints but sticking to 'NO FLOWERS' policy. 


Background in white or gold or copper on linen, tissue or hand made paper

Tradition (unfolding)

 
From my Wedding Card collection--'Conjugal'. Oriental designs. Symmetric soft curves and floral imprints but sticking to 'NO FLOWERS' policy. Background in white or metallic on linen, tissue or hand made paper

Doors



This symphony of pyramids could be used as stained glass designs for doors, 
optical illusions and such for the rocker, teaser and curious in all of us ;)

Choose one or the whole column, choose as many layers in each, let me coordinate the colors with your theme and watch the magic!

Sun Dreams

 


Let me catch the first few rays of the Sun, that disappear from the linen of your bed before your lashes that touch them. 




This couture-impressed design was made with Adobe Photoshop and was used as a corner for poetry magazine '09.

Purple haze


Purple Haze.
This smoky design was done with Adobe Photoshop and discontinuous lines techniques.

Geometrix


And here's a stained glass rose for you..

Free-hand, pencil, paper and then Adobe Photoshop.
Looking forward to doing that in glass

Now the Math: Out of 4 triangles made by 2 diagonals of each square, 2 are chosen on the same side of 1 diagonal.
Each of those triangles is divided in half by a line from the opposite vertex.
So series of concentric squares and similar quadrilaterals later we have ourselves a rose.

Powder art


  

I had given in to a severe weeklong bout of fever; and while the body was burning with blistering viruses; my mind was creating shaky drawings on a paper. Thanks to Paracetamol and delirium, these drawings became backgrounds for many webpages, for months and years to follow.







Rangoli--A popular North-Indian 'folk-art'; it  is a form of sandpainting decoration that uses finely ground white and coloured powders (including indigo-- fabric dye and spices like turmeric, chili, rawa, rice flour, and wheat flour), and is commonly done outside homes in India.
The term rangoli is derived from the words rang (colour) and aavalli ('coloured creepers' or 'row of colours').
The concept of design here includes one important point --the entire pattern must be an unbroken line, with no gaps to be left anywhere for evil spirits to enter. The popularity rangoli has spread all over the Indian sub-continent over the years and so has the meaning, what was an entry-point of 'goodness', 'luck' and 'prosperity' for the household has grown into an ostentatious welcome and entry-point for all guests or atithi to the house. 
For me, personally, geometric designs such as these carry a deep meaning of balance and outrage concurrently.And there is something about the famous 'hens and chickens' structure that I can not get over with.

Chakra nation

From the nation of doctrines....and boundaries of peace, rises the fever of power.


























 Seething in the comfort of rules, is the seed of violent beauty, of rage, power and strength, of curves, feminity and love, of kindness and care--arises Shakti- the Mother of us all.

Atomic Age: The Gadget

graphic design using Adobe Photoshop, Corel, Inkscape and photographed elements.

Poetry magazine illustration.

















Trinity was the first test of an atomic weapon. It was conducted by the United Stateson July 16, 1945 at a location 35 miles (56 km) southeast of Socorro, New Mexico on the White Sands Proving Ground. Trinity was a test of an implosion-design plutonium device. The weapon's codename was "The Gadget". Using the same conceptual design, the Fat Man device was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9. The Trinity detonation was equivalent to the explosion of around 20 kilotons of TNT. The date is usually considered the beginning of the Atomic Age." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_(nuclear_test)

















































This was a chair--a broken one that served as a multipurpose stool at home.
And then there was the the broken fused glass tray...that I tinied into smaller pieces, added some relief on the white mosaic base.
Now its a planter stand, on the walkway of our apartment building. Or call it a small patio table if you may... here it is in rainstorm.

Rain

As soon as I get the perfect clock hands, this will be our first mosaic-ed clock. Hubs & I worked on it together :)

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