This blog follows the progress and techniques of the graphic novel called reMIND created by Jason Brubaker. It’s scheduled to be released in 2010, but as all personal projects go, that could change.


touchpuppet is a collaborative cultural outpost created by a like minded group of young artists and consumers. We are photographers, fashion designers, visual absurdists and graduating psychologists. We are part of a culture that we truly love, and this site is as much a reflection of that culture as it is a reflection of ourselves.
In short, we are travel obsessed 20-somethings in love with art, fashion and photography.
Enjoy our site. Send us emails. And if you’re ever in the Austin/Houston (and occasionally Tokyo/London/NY) area, find us out on the town to discuss existentialism and Tom Ford’s latest collection over a pint. It’s on us.


TV Show Posters by art director, Albert Exergian who uses an iconic symbol from each show to represent its identity or theme in the most minimalist way possible.



Project: Gama Issa House (02/2000)
Project architects: Marcio Kogan + // Oswaldo Pessano, Renata Furlanetto, Samanta Cafardo, Suzana Glogowski, Lair Reis, Carolina Castroviejo, Eduardo Glycerio, Maria Cristina Motta, Gabriel Kogan, Mariana Simas, Beatriz Meyer
Interior designers: Marcio kogan + Diana radomysler
Collaborations: Gisela Zilberman, Diana Radomysler
construction: 02/2001
Location: Alto de Pinheiros . São Paulo. Sp . Brasil
Site area: 1700 square meters
Built area: 700 square meters
Credits Photos : Arnaldo Pappalardo

Photographer Christopher Payne recently shared with Dwell some images from his book Asylum: Inside the Closed World of State Mental Hospitals, and boy are they something. Christopher spent six years documenting these amazing old buildings where in 1948 more than half a million people were being kept. To say the buildings are lavish is an understatement. While the occupants may or may not have been able to appreciate them, these buildings are magnificent.
Honestly they’re still kind of spooky as shit, but there’s something about abandoned buildings that for some reason tend to resonate with people. To think that these buildings were bustling with life in the last hundred years is remarkable.
I found some videos where, fashion designer and instructor Tu-Anh demonstrates the fastest and simplest techniques on how to draw fashion. This video series is designed for beginners and includes an overview of the basic supplies for drawing fashion, how to choose the fashion figure from a magazine, and transform it into a fashion figure