Robert L. Peters

31 January 2015

I looked in temples, churches, and mosques. I found the divine within my heart…

(attributed to Rumi)


30 January 2015

Sometimes your only available transportation is a leap of faith.


28 January 2015

The time will soon be here when my grandchild will long for the cry of a loon…

The time will soon be here when my grandchild will long for the cry of a loon, the flash of a salmon, the whisper of spruce needles, or the screech of an eagle. But he will not make friends with any of these creatures and when his heart aches with longing, he will curse me.

Chief Dan GeorgeTsleil-Waututh Nation (1899-1981)


27 January 2015

When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death…

When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death, so when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song, and die like a hero going home.

—Tecumseh, Shawnee leader (1768-1813)


26 January 2015

Do not fear change. Change fear.

Thanks to Brenda Morrison in Eagle River, Ontario, for this quotable…


25 January 2015

Hands of time…

tick_tock_clock

(original image source unknown)


24 January 2015

The Look of Silk… The First Session of Cross Strait Silk Culture and Creativity Forum and International Silk Creative Design Expo

dress_on_mannequin

collar_detail

silk_display

pillow_scarves

Robert_L_Peters_silk_display

silk_scarf

scarf_in_blue

scarf_in_green

Cross_Strait_Silk_Culture_and_Creativity_Forum

Shenzhen, China

One of 2014’s highlights for me was to participate in The Look of Silk, (The First Session of Cross Strait Silk Culture and Creativity Forum and International Silk Creative Design Expo) sponsored by China Tong Yuan Co., Ltd., Shenzhen China Silk Park, and the Taiwan Cultural and Creative Industry Association.

As one of “eight internationally renowned designers” I was invited to design a pattern for silk scarves, participate in the 5-day event in Shenzhen, and to give a keynote address. A design team from Taiwan was commissioned to develop 80 different silk products using our designs, “creating a systematically multicultural design integrating multiple aspects.”

The Look of Silk plans to “keep alive the spirit of traditional Chinese culture and the international role played by silk in the past, while creating a brand image and market orientation for Chinese silk” by means of innovative creative activities.

I recently received images from the organizers of my silk design applied to various products (from bed linens to ties, cushions, padded laptop cases, and other fashion accessories). Shown above is a small sampling… my original design was in oranges and reds, but the product design team decided to also iterate it in blue and green.

Click on the image below or here for a larger view of my silk pattern design (135mm x 135mm) entitled Occidental Habitué. Details of the design can be viewed at my original blog post, here

Robert_L_Peters-China_Silk_square

Occidental Habitué

Thousands of icons, images, and visual impressions cross our consciousness daily, weaving rich cultural narratives and imbuing meaningful memories. As travellers, émigrés, and nomads in a shrinking world we wrap ourselves in layers of sensuous, intertwined experience.

My concept involves the creation of an intentionally layered, quirky, and semi-random collage, providing unexpected juxtapositions that draw in the viewer and then reward curiosity with serendipitous surprises of simultaneity. Ancient meets modern, complex collides with simple, small bests large.

Luminous color acts as a background for layered, multidirectional, copyright-free imagery from earlier eras — visual ephemera, linear diagrams, Victorian etchings, old prints, ornaments, printers’ spot illustrations, ad cuts, and clip art — from ancient cave paintings to art deco elements, from flora and fauna to whimsical human inventions.

As if floating above this nuanced visual composition, a repeating directional diamond pattern of contemporary symbols and info-graphic icons (from The Noun Project, an online “visual language” resource of icons created by a global community) lends added dimension, with icons varying in color in a top-to-bottom gradation, complementary to the hue of the background.

A symbol of the globe glows in the fabric’s center.

© 2014 Robert L. Peters


19 January 2015

Eyecandy… Best of the Year from Netdiver Mag

txokosi_2014

Krzysztof_Domaradzki_2014

Christian_Tagliavini_2014

andric.biz_2014

quotesonshit_2014

Josep_Puy_beige_2014

Nigel_Buchanan_2014

Montréal, Quebec

After a 5-year hiatus, Netdiver has rebooted its tradition of revisiting the past year of design news to choose projects that stand out “for their originality, quality, and inspirational value.”

Shown above is a tiny sampling — see much more at BOTY 14.

Thanks, Carole Guevin.


18 January 2015

Even if we could turn back, we’d probably never end up where we started…

Haruki Murakami


11 January 2015

At last, U.S. foreign policy made crystal clear…

clear_as_mud

(original source unknown, but remarkably cogent)


« Previous PageNext Page »

© 2002-