They Draw & Travel contest runner up: Dave Douglass

Dave Douglass Favourite Place: San Francisco, USA "I recently took my wife & kids to Yosemite National Park in California... What an amazing and inspiring place! I had to put all the kid-friendly activities we enjoyed into a map."

Dave Douglass Favourite Place: San Francisco, USA "I recently took my wife & kids to Yosemite National Park in California... What an amazing and inspiring place! I had to put all the kid-friendly activities we enjoyed into a map."

"I live in South Pasadena. It's a favourite for film & television productions because of it's beautiful Craftsman-style homes, friendly small-town feel and proximity to the film industry. I've been learning about some fun shooting locations used…

"I live in South Pasadena. It's a favourite for film & television productions because of it's beautiful Craftsman-style homes, friendly small-town feel and proximity to the film industry. I've been learning about some fun shooting locations used in some pretty memorable movies."

They Draw & Travel contest runner up: Aunyarat Watanabe

Aunyarat Watanabe Favourite Place: Bangkok, Thailand "These are my favourite pastry shops in Tokyo. I especially love the apricot cake from Cafe Zinc. (in the lower left corner) It really goes well with their coffee. Please come to Tokyo and en…

Aunyarat Watanabe Favourite Place: Bangkok, Thailand "These are my favourite pastry shops in Tokyo. I especially love the apricot cake from Cafe Zinc. (in the lower left corner) It really goes well with their coffee. Please come to Tokyo and enjoy these cute and colourful cakes!"

"When I lived in Sydney, my favourite place was Taronga zoo! The Zoo has animal shows, keeper talks, and animal encounters all day. The best way to arrive at the zoo is via ferry from Circular Quay. Once you arrive at the port, you can catch the rop…

"When I lived in Sydney, my favourite place was Taronga zoo! The Zoo has animal shows, keeper talks, and animal encounters all day. The best way to arrive at the zoo is via ferry from Circular Quay. Once you arrive at the port, you can catch the rope way known as Sky Safari! It gives you magnificent views of the zoo and the harbour. You can even camp in a safari tent in the zoo, so why not try the Roar and Snore! Sleeping in the zoo is fantastic!"

"The best way to explore Bangkok is pier hopping! It's really cool to go across Chaophraya river by boat, feeling the tropical wind. There are many piers (tha) along the river, and each pier (tha) has its own style. The most popular tourist sights a…

"The best way to explore Bangkok is pier hopping! It's really cool to go across Chaophraya river by boat, feeling the tropical wind. There are many piers (tha) along the river, and each pier (tha) has its own style. The most popular tourist sights are located between Central Pier to 13th pier (Tha Phra Athit) , but my favourite is 15th pier (Tha Thewet). The 15th pier has a lovely flower market, and you can feed fish while waiting for your boat. Fun! I lived in Dusit district. My apartment was on Suan Ooy street (in the upper left corner). I miss the yummy street food in that neighbourhood!"

They Draw & Travel contest: honourable mentions

Throughout the day today we are posting the honourable mentions, runners-up, and the winner of the "It's a Creative & Curious World" contest with They Draw & Travel. If you missed this contest, take a look at the contest page to see all of the creative submissions. 

Congratulations to all the honourable mentions!

Yebin Mun Favourite Place: Seoul, South Korea "I am an illustrator currently living and working in Seoul. I used to go these places with my mom when she visited me. Actually, I love every part of Seoul. Especially, Bukchon Hanok Village. I wish you could visit there once. You will love it."

Camila Tubaro Favourite Place: Buenos Aires, Argentina "This is my point of view of the places I like the most of my city, Buenos Aires. Its colours, its architecture and the spirit of a city full of people, music and culture. The technique I used represents, to me, my child memories of some of these places: some of which still remain and others that no longer exist. However, if they are drawn here it is because they are all important to me and make me feel that, no matter where I go, there will never be any place better than my home: Buenos Aires. Hope you like it!"

Lori Weitzel Favourite Place: Orlando, USA "57 Million People visit Orlando each year, and most just hit the amusement parks. This is a map of the other parks not to be missed."

Kate Mason Favourite Place: French Alps, France "I was born in Adelaide & have lived here all my life. I can't imagine living anywhere else. Its smallish and beautiful. and was a very well planned city settlement back in 1836. The River Torrens runs right through the city centre straight out to the beach. Its surrounded by bike paths and you can bike all the way around from beach through the city to the hills. The city centre is made up of orderly blocks & four main squares. The neat city centre is surrounded by parks and gardens. We have everything practical that we need here as well as all the crazy adventurous stuff, and we are paradise for foodies. We are world famous for our Barossa Valley wines, great white sharks, city of Churches, WOMADelaide, Tasting Australia, Adelaide & Fringe Festivals, the magnificent Adelaide Oval Cricket Ground and Tour Down Under Cycling. Adelaide is a great place to raise a family because its a very affordable living city. Its perfect as a base to travel the world, then come home to blissful life. There's no place like home! Ranked in top 10 in The Economists Worlds most liveable cities in 2010, 2011 & 2012. Also ranked THE most liveable city in Australia {Property Council of Australia] in 2011, 2012 & 2013! On my map, I've included all the artsy & quirky & adventurous things to do in Adelaide & surrounds. They are all the places I recommend & take visitors new to our city to. Come & visit & see all the amazing things we have to offer!"

Pysanka: The Eggsquisite Art

As a special treat for you this Easter weekend, here is an entire article from our current issue. Writer Brendan Harrison delves into his heritage to discover the art of decorated eggs.

Photos by Sharon McIntyre. Eggs painted by Donna Elkow.

Growing up, I didn’t identify strongly with any particular ethnic background. Typical dinner fare in the Harrison household consisted of ground beef paired with a rotating selection of starches. Lunches alternated between cheese slice sandwiches and Pizza Pops. Breakfast unfailingly came from a cereal box.

Vestiges of my parents’ heritage remained, subtly informing our traditions and beliefs.

And yet, looking back I realize that vestiges of my parents’ heritage remained, subtly informing our traditions and beliefs. Easter in particular was a holiday where my mother’s Romanian roots showed through, and not only in her insistence on following the Orthodox calendar. Like many children, we’d spend afternoons dyeing and decorating hard-boiled eggs. Unlike other families, however, before we could eat these eggs, we had to tap our eggs against one another, end to end, in the hopes of cracking our opponent’s egg, while ritualistically calling and responding, “Christ is risen. Truly He is risen.” The person whose egg remained unbroken would be the victor. This competition was taken seriously and seemed entirely normal to me.

While we kids spent hours attempting to fortify our eggs through decoration, my father, having little in the way of a competitive spirit, would amuse himself by coming up with increasingly complex designs for his eggs. One year he came home with a handful of strange implements that he’d purchased from the local Ukrainian church. Instead of boiling his egg as we did ours, he poked a hole in either end and blew the raw yolk and whites into a bowl. As we scribbled on our eggs with crayon and dipped them into a single vat of dye, he lined up a series of dyes from lightest to darkest and applied beeswax to his eggs between dips. When he finished with the dye, he placed his eggs in a warm oven to melt the wax, then wiped them gently with a cloth as he removed them, revealing vibrant eggs unlike any we’d seen before—delicate and intricate and beautiful.

This was my first exposure to the ancient art of pysanka. Although this technique of wax-resist egg decorating is most closely associated with Ukrainian culture, the practice is widespread across many Eastern European countries. The word pysanka derives from the Ukrainian “pysaty,” which means “to write,” and refers specifically to eggs decorated with the written wax method (our primitive crayon and dye versions would be closer to the Ukrainian krashanky—boiled eggs dyed a single colour to be blessed and eaten at Easter). The purely decorative pysanky hold a place of importance in Ukrainian culture that can be difficult to overstate. When the Ukrainian-settled town of Vegreville, Alberta, sought a symbol to celebrate its heritage, they built a 31-foot-long, three-and-a-half-story tall, two-ton sculpture of an intricately decorated Easter egg.

But how did egg decorating come to play such an important role in Ukrainian culture? Archaeological evidence suggests that eggs decorated with sun symbols were part of pre-Christian sun god worship, revered as symbols of the renewal of spring. As the Christian faith began to take hold in these regions, eggs were repurposed as symbol of the resurrection and soon came to play an important role in Ukrainian Easter rituals. By the 15th century, this practice had become widespread, as evidenced by an intact pysanka from this era found in Lviv. The tradition was passed down from mother to daughter through the generations into the early 20th century. As emigrants sought new opportunities in North and South America, they brought the tradition with them, keeping it alive even as Soviet authorities were banning it in the motherland as a forbidden religious observance.

Traditionally, the women of a family would make pysanky in the last week of Lent. They would heat a vat of beeswax on a stove to the melting point, then dip a stylus with a conical reservoir into it. Dyes would be prepared in a variety of colours from traditional plant- and animal-based formulas, including extracts from dried plants, roots, bark, berries and insects. Working from lightest to darkest dyes, they would apply wax to the eggshell between colours to keep the covered section protected, building up the complexity of their designs layer by layer. Although the image most commonly conjured up by the thought of a Ukrainian Easter egg is of a complex geometric pattern, the variety of designs and approaches is vast and laden with symbolic meaning that changes from region to region. The most popular include nested geometric patterns, waves, spirals, farm implements, and animal and plant motifs, as well as Christian symbols.

Pysanky are crafted today in much the same way they always were, though they are frequently created for artistic rather than religious purposes. The only equipment required for creating your own pysanka are raw eggs for a canvas, a needle (or specialized egg blower if you’re feeling fancy) to remove the innards of the egg, dyes in a variety of colours, beeswax for melting and machined brass styluses (known as kistka, psychok, psyak or pysal’tse, depending on region) for applying the wax to the egg in a variety of thicknesses. Unlike standard vinegar-soluble Easter egg dyes, Ukrainian eggs require specialized water-soluable dyes, and you’ll want to get at least the six basic colours—yellow, orange, light blue, light green, bright red and black. Once you get the basics down, you’ll be amazed at how quickly you can come up with heirloom-quality eggs that you’ll want to keep around long after Easter.

If you've enjoyed this content, please subscribe to our quarterly print magazine.

the real Easter bunny

 
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In the spirit of the arrival of Spring, and celebrating the Easter holiday, I thought I would post some photos of my rabbit, Angel. At Christmas my husband surprised me with a trip to the Calgary Humane Society to choose a rabbit to take home. We had talked about getting a dog, but since we live in a condo, we didn't think it would be fair to keep a dog cooped up all day. 

20140415-Angel-CH-0011.jpg

Having Angel as our pet has been a wonderful experience! She lives in her cage while we're at work, but roams freely around the condo when we're home. (We had to do some bunny-proofing, of course) A lot of people ask me if she needs to be walked. As much as I would love to take her for a jaunt in the park, Angel likes to do her own form of exercise–running laps around the coffee table in the living room at warp speed! Rabbits need 2-4 hours of exercise, play and socialization a day, and Angel gets plenty of that. 

Wishing you and yours a very Happy Easter!

poster bunny for a "Retrospecticus" tour

The National Poster Retrospecticus is a touring poster show launching in May featuring more than 250 hand-printed event posters from over 80 of the most outstanding poster designers in the USA.

"Our mission is to celebrate posters, the made-by-hand aesthetic and help spread that enthusiasm around the world."  

Take a look at the National Poster Retrospecticus' upcoming tour on their website. 

illustrations make amusing visual commentary of your Facebook status

Natalie K. Nelson is a designer and illustrator based in Atlanta, Georgia. She has a tumblr site dedicated to her "What's On Your Mind?" project where she posts an ongoing collection of real Facebook statuses in illustration form. Each humorous illustration is completed in under an hour! You can take a look at some of her other illustrations on her tumblr page

Type Tuesday: Sumner Stone

Sumner Stone is a typeface designer based in California, USA. From 1984-1989, Sumner was the Director of Typography for Adobe Systems, Inc where he created and carried out Adobe's typographic program. In 1990, Sumner founded the Stone Type Foundry Inc. where he continues to work as a typeface designer. 

Sumner will be teaching a four-day type design workshop called "Structure and Emotion in Letterform" from May 28-31 in San Francisco at Letterform Archive and the letterpress studio at the City College of San Francisco. If you can't make it to Sumner's workshop, he is lecturing on the same topic on Wednesday May 28 at 7pm at the Adobe Town Hall. Click here for more details! 

They Draw & Travel contest ending soon

Jan Shepherd Favourite Place: Europe "Things that inspire me to be creative."

Pascu Cristina Artemisa

Lena Umezawa Favourite Place: South Africa "Some curious signs from around the Rainbow Nation. South Africans tell it like it is and are never without a sense of humour. Many of these signs I saw with my own eyes, and at first they were shocking. I lived near Cape Town when my oldest child was a baby, and my husband is originally from Johannesburg. Many fond memories."

Our contest collaboration with They Draw & Travel ends soon, so be sure to submit your maps before April 20! 

submit your maps for our contest collaboration

Yebin Mun Favourite Place: Jeju-do, South Korea "I am an illustrator Yebin Mun currently living and working in Seoul. I used to go these places with my mon when she visited to me. Actually, I love every part of Seoul. Especially, Bukchon Hanok Village. I wish you could visit there once. You will love it."

Aunyarat Watanabe Favourite Place: Bangkok "These are my favourite pastry shops in Tokyo. I especially love the apricot cake from Cafe Zinc! (in the lower left corner) It really goes well with their coffee. Please come to Tokyo and enjoy these cute and colourful cakes!!!"

Lori Weitzel  Favourite Place: Orlando, USA "57 Million People visit Orlando each year, and most just hit the amusement parks. This is a map of the other parks not to be missed."

Our contest collaboration, "It's a Creative & Curious World" with They Draw & Travel, ends on April 20. Be sure to submit your map of the creative and curious places and sights in the vicinity of where you live or where you grew up for a chance to be featured in UPPERCASE magazine. 

We want to know about the quirky or unusual things in your world! 

creative challenge: patterns, please!

Erin's knitting grid pattern, and Cara's carrot pattern

Erin's knitting grid pattern, and Cara's carrot pattern

As we continue to celebrate all things patterns here at UPPERCASE, we thought we would show you some patterns submitted for Issue #21's creative challenge. We included ours as well! 

Be sure to send in your patterns using the hashtag #patternsplease and tagging @uppercasemag before June 1, 2014 to be entered into a draw to win a free subscription or renewal!

Janine's pattern design 

Janine's pattern design 

pattern by @renmeleon

pattern by @renmeleon

pattern by @natalie_gerber

pattern by @natalie_gerber

Call for Submissions: Issue #22

photo by Geninne Zlatkis

What does colour mean to you?

Take a photograph of the colour media that is special to you (paint palettes, paint, trays, pastels, crayons, pencils, inks, pigments, etc) and write a brief description of how and why this art supply goes beyond being just a tool or medium. How does it enhance your creativity? What makes this particular medium special to you? How is colour tied in with your identity as an artist?

SUGGESTIONS 
• Take a photo of your favourite media in good natural light against a white backdrop to show the object or artifact in its entirety
• Get up close and personal with some detail shots highlighting colour and texture and labels
• Provide a wider view of your workspace and artwork, showing your art supplies and various colours

Images should be RGB jpgs at least 6 inches wide at 300dpi. Please title the files with your last name. To submit your work, click here.

DEADLINE MAY 1, 2014