Beneficial facts on Graffiti Creator Alphabets

September 10, 2010 - 12:20 pm 7 Comments
graffiti-creators Beneficial facts on Graffiti Creator Alphabets

i was very pleased with this product. For any of you looking for a good black book, i’d suggest this one. its a fairly good size too, so lots of room to draw things in detail. plus the pages dont bleed to the page below it with like, a heavy ink sharpie. Plus its a hard cover so u know it’ll hold up for a while. i love the part on the front where u can put ur tag name on there. very cool =) over all i’d recommend it to keep ur graff art in, and organized. It definitely comes in handy

Are there too many Christian references in Left 4 Dead 2?
There’s a part where some guy in a gun shop blows up a fuel tanker and clears the path for the survivors after they get his Coke for him and he says, “God be with you,” and Ellis replies, “God be with you too, sir.” Another part when they’re in the mall and Coach gets the other survivors to pray Graffiti Creator Alphabets that the food court is ok and when Rochelle rescues an incapacitated survivor, she sometimes says, “The man upstairs is not ready to take you yet.”I think there were a couple of minor “God” references in the first Left 4 Dead and Zoey had a funny line when they walked past some graffiti on a wall that said, “God is dead!” and Zoey says, “Oh no! The zombies killed God!” but there definitely weren’t as many Christian references as there are in Left 4 Dead 2. Do you think it’s just because Left 4 Dead 2 is set in America’s south where most folks believe all that Christian gibberish and the game creators were just trying to make it more plausible or do you think there is some Christian motive behind it?
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7 Responses to “Beneficial facts on Graffiti Creator Alphabets”

  1. Calhoun Says:

    ABSOLUTELY AN AMAZING COLLECTION! THE ART IS GREAT, I LOVE IT! BIG PROPS TO THE SCENE

  2. Billotti Says:

    This is just like graff world book, chronicling the movement into other areas of the world. This is the same, but for women in graff.

  3. Ireland Says:

    Street artist/fine artist Nicholas Ganz, author of Graffiti World, offers urban art enthusiasts a second round of exceptional research and art compilation, this time concentrating on the pioneering contributions of women to contemporary graffiti writing and artwork. Having always been a part of the street art front lines, female graffitisans are typically overshadowed by the men in the ranks due to sheer numbers rather than any lack of innovation or talent. Ganz, along with author Nancy Macdonald and co-conspirator Swoon have produced an exhaustive narrative that tells the intricate story of graffiti writing women. Included are the artist’s personal stories and their insights into the male-dominated urban art world.

    The Ganz collection, like his earlier work, promotes the efforts of praiseworthy, marginalized artists. In the case of Graffiti World that marginalization occurred as a result of the art form itself. In Graffiti Women, it’s not the “second-best”, urban artist that is lauded but the women who are graffiti writers that receive the exhaustive and well-deserved coverage. Although the author’s intent is not to be divisive, it is unfortunate that our cultural approach to acknowledging one another centers around labeling people as either “blank” or “female blank”. In Three Artists: (Three Women), Anne Middleton wrote:

    To identify an artist this way, as a woman, has never been a merely parenthetical remark. The qualification has customarily been offered as a limit to, rather than a guarantee of, suitability for the artist’s role – with mostly irritating results for the artists themselves. (2)

    Nicholas Ganz does a unparalleled job of describing the contribution of almost two hundred women who work in the urban art genre. His book will continue as a permanent part of my small but well-loved collection and I will continue to wonder whether the world is best served by keeping the commendation of exemplary women separate from that of men.

  4. Nunamaker Says:

    A must have for any art lover! If you are interested I recommend you to start first with the “Graffiti World: Street Art From Five Continents” book from the same author.

  5. Lem Says:

    This is a nice sketch book for the budding artist. Could do with spirals so it’s easier to lay the book flat.

  6. Ives Says:

    This dvd shows some of the biggest names in graffiti art. The dvd gets the opinion of each graffiti artist and a guy who tries to get rid of tagging in his city. This is a good dvd I just didn’t like the atittude of most of the graffiti artists because they make it seem like in order to make it big you have to go through them first and that you must go through tough times to be respected. These aren’t the BEST graff. artist they are just well known or over rated. Entertaining film but don’t assume that graffiti is what they say it is, they have their own opinions. These graff artists act like they know everything and it gets annoying but what makes this a good film is the images you see and their passion for it.

  7. Esparza Says:

    Like most of Doug Pray’s films (Scratch, Surfwise, Big Rig), he takes a subculture that has strong negative connotations and puts a human face to it. Like most people, I have had mixed feeling about graffiti. I’ve seen some amazing murals by graf artists, but the signature scrawls you see everywhere tend to piss me off. But after I saw this film, at least now I look at it in a different way. Great stuff. I will never look at graffiti the same way again.