Free inviting roadmap on Graffiti Playlist

August 24, 2010 - 1:02 am 3 Comments
graffiti-supplies Free inviting roadmap on Graffiti Playlist

My main use for KK-G is to clean various kinds of stains off of my concrete driveway. Spray it on….. let it sit 30 seconds or so…. rinse with the garden hose….. stains are gone.

My first experience with it was when the contractor for the new house I had built used it to remove wood stain from the concrete front porch. As I watched him spray this stuff on the stains, I had serious doubt that it would work, but work it did, and effortlessly at that.

A great product, and a must-have for anyone wanting to keep their concrete stain-free. While there may be other products that can handle this task, I cant imagine anything doing it as easily as KK-G does that’s also non-toxic so as to not harm any of our pets and the environment.

Is their a website similar to Deviantart but for graffiti artists only?
I belong Graffiti Playlist to deviantart, but i want to know if their is a website strictly for graffiti artists (basically where everyone is a graffiti artist) similar to deviantart.
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graffiti-supplies Free inviting roadmap on Graffiti Playlist

3 Responses to “Free inviting roadmap on Graffiti Playlist”

  1. Callahan Says:

    This is a fantastic book for anyone who wants to really learn about the graffiti movement, and see literally hundreds of pictures of the art form, on walls all over the world. You can see commonalities and themes that emerge, and get the sense that this is an art form that’s here to stay, with enduring human value. The book is creatively wrapped in a nifty poster you can unfold and hang on your wall. I’m an art teacher, and I consider this book a great classroom resource.

  2. Neubig Says:

    Horrible. Not happy with Seller. I never even received the book, way after it was supposed to be shipped.

  3. Crawford Says:

    Graffiti World fails where it shines the most: pretending to be the most comprehensive collection up to date of graffiti related art.

    The dellusion of offering a quasi encyclopedic work should be enough to deride what is a coffee table book at best. It offers a large selection of artists each given typically one or two page spreads, with a small paragraph ranging from the generic, to the gratuitous, and occasionally also insightful.

    A brief historic overview serves also in part to frame the work, and while it tries to broaden the scope across centuries and continents it quickly narrows itself down to the inevitable and predictable graffiti developed in New York in the late 70’s and 80’s that has influenced generations. Not that it delves in any depth into why or exactly how it happened, and the ways in which it became such an iconic reference, but it is perfunctorily used to narrow down the actual scope of the book and the work offered.

    While there are some glaring omissions and random picks, it is true that it offers a typical selection of some of the most recognized artist in this segment, but that it is not its biggest flaw. “Street Art From Five Continents” is the worst lie that the book does not even pretend to hold very well. The volume is structured around two large parts, one for the Americas (which is still predominantly USA based) and one to Europe, the rest of the continents are lumped into a small section towards the end of the book called “The Rest of the World” . And while the brief paragraphs dedicated to each depicted country are relatively adequate, these are also fairly general and often instead of adding much to the dialogue risk feeding stereotypes.

    Whether a marketing decision, or a creative one, pretending to tell stories about a holistic approach to graffiti and urban art hurts badly a book that otherwise offers a decent sampling of some areas of urban culture in a couple of world regions.