Spring botanical junk journaling blends vintage florals, garden ephemera, and layered textures to create deeply personal, nature-inspired art. Whether using free printables or curated kits, it’s a ...
This title is part of a longer publication history. The full run of this journal will be searched. TITLE HISTORY A title history is the publication history of a journal and includes a listing of the ...
In this video I create a calm scrapbook journal spread using vintage style ephemera and a beautiful coastal painting page. I ...
Neighbors are mounting a new lobbying effort to turn the giant, empty armory in their community into something useful.
When Tiffany France began making plans last year to open a solo brick-and-mortar location for her stationery store, she ...
Music playback, then, became both a private experience and a public investment; objects like Sony’s TPS-L2-Walkman Cassette Player and MDR-3L2 Headphones (1979) and Discman D-50 Compact Disc Player ...
Over five decades, he has built—and then shared—a one-of-a-kind cultural archive. Courtesy Dwight M. Cleveland As collecting categories go, this is a nichey one. Lobby cards—small posters displayed in ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. The details: More than 80 exhibitors ...
Springer Nature is a signatory of the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA). Because small numbers of highly cited articles can have outsized influence on certain citation measures ...
We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we love. Promise. For as long as I can remember, I've documented my life in a series of composition books, leather-bound ...
Some of the objects came from Steve Jobs’ childhood bedroom. They’re being made available by his stepbrother, John Chovanec. In 1990, John Chovanec’s mother married Steve Jobs’ father, Paul. Chovanec ...
Dartmouth’s new art and art history journal “Ephemera” is leaning into its “fun” side. According to co-editor-in-chief Sara Shelton ’26, the idea would be “feeling like you can rip out a piece of ...