Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
After all this time..
After pushing out sketches and thoughts for 6 years and over 1330 posts, I quit. Not doing this shit, but using this page to show my illustrations.
Follow me on instagram - @ofhvidsten
Portfolio - cargocollective
And of course don´t forget BirgersOterUtleie
Thank you..
Labels:
birgers oter utleie,
burgers,
cupofill,
drawing,
food,
foodtruck,
Illustration,
msginger,
tegning
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Know what you eat.
One of, I will guess, hundreds of drawings on the wall at MK design in Oslo. Back today to view the damage and take on the rest of the wall..
Labels:
drawing,
eating,
food,
house of bergen,
illustreation,
mk design,
pig,
tegning
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Live illustration
Had a nice time with my fellow illustrators at Kunstnerens Hus in Oslo doing live illustration.
Articles about the venu;
VG
Blikk
Monday, June 17, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Forest fest
It's easter. So bring out your pipe and hunt down a hare or two, put them on a stick and make a fire in the woods. This easter bunny really got it..
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Festival poster
Working my ass of getting this poster to the printers. Great initiative from Even Nord Rydningen making Bønder i Byen come true..
Bønder i Byen (Farmers in town) Festival
Friday, February 3, 2012
Norwegian chopsticks
Labels:
chopsticks,
cupofill,
food,
hammer,
how does illustrators live,
illustrators,
noodles,
paint stirrer,
scissor
Friday, August 6, 2010
traveling Europe Summary Part 5
Not much to say about Amsterdam...
Like many a morning, it started out hopping on a train. It was a long and continuous trainjourney. Not much sleep since we had to move around on the train a bit. when we crossed the border into the Netherlands the train changed staff, Dutch sounds so funny we were cracking up.
We arrived mid-day/afternoon, hostel was already booked so it was just a matter of locating it.
Big disappointment. I would describe the hostel with these words: dirty, crowded, hot, dank, clammy, smelly, far from the city centre, horrible. It looked like somebody had been murdered in the bathroom. Utterly horrendous. A small tip when booking hostels, try to book the uptown ones.
On a limited budget, we just combed the canals, sitting down eating sirup-waffles and browsing the Interior-design shops. I really like the narrow houses by the canals, even the houseboats looked real cozy. I´d imagine myself drifting on one of those, just chilling and living life at my own pace. The biggest general impression from the trip is how crappy Oslo is with bikes.
We ate pizza in the park both days, and that´s basically our stay in Amsterdam. The city with many a coffee shop but no good coffee oh, and plenty of bicycles. Wish I had one.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
traveling Europe Summary Part 4
Berlin, Germany
What strikes me most in my general impression of taking the train in Germany is how an industrious country Germany really is. It´s a fucking machinery where people move automatically. Very efficient and a bit bothersome. One of the pros/cons of interrailing is the prospect of just jumping on any train without worrying about reservation. Just find a seat and sit down. In Germany, this is hard to put in effect. Even in a next to empty train-car people will make a bit of a fuzz if you are in the place they have reserved. We´re talking about grabbing hold of a conductor instead the direct approach. Then you move and wait in suspense in between stations. No sleep for tired Norwegians.






After a very long trainride, we arrived in Berlin. Both of us really looking forward to a good stay, having high expectations. Almost immediately it got shot down, first thing we did and biggest mistake was to go to the tourist info to book our accommodation. The dude behind the counter was a real asshole and we ended up feeling like we´d been had. It amounted to booking three nights at a pension we really did not want to stay at, since we had booked it the same day it proved impossible to get a cancellation. Next big crack in our budget, to top it off, the asshole managed to sell us a 72 hour transportation ticket that we barely used. had we reserved at a hostel beforehand, we would´ve saved more than a hundred euros. If you haven´t already guessed it, it put a pretty big dampener on things and almost ruined Berlin for us.
We tried to suck it up and drown our sorrows and our misery.
Next day....
Always in the search for a more than excellent cup of coffee, we headed out into the unknown and thanks to google maps located Bonanza Coffee Heroes. Hopes high, anticipation equally. I was not disappointed, rather impressed really. Nothing but good things to say. Heres a summary in key-words (impressions linear from start to finish): Nice place, Hip-looking people outside, Hearing words in english, nice looking espresso machine, ooh a small roaster, friendly barista, wheres the black coffee?, ethiopian, nice, taking pictures, chit-chat, smells good, sit down, draw some, nice coffee, espresso time, not bad, new barista, getting directions, nice neighborhood, and off we go. Thanks for the great coffee! why settle for mediocracy? Quality focused coffee shops giving you great experiences are starting to pop up. Soon we might be able to drink good coffee in all cities, well maybe not yet. The prospect has me a little bit aroused tho. mmm.. Coffee.
Next on to shopping/ browsing and gallery hopping in the Mitte district. Soo much good stuff, this is where it´s happening. We definately felt the aftermath of the big tradeshows (Bright, Bread and Butter). Even a CTRL pop-up store.
Lunch was up, I ate the gazpacho an Hilde Marie had a piece of Veggie lasagna. so good. The place was in the backyard right around the corner from the Circleculture gallery.My one objective in Berlin was to pick up the newest issue of Lodown magazine, such an easy task and a delightful one as well. We strolled right into a magazine/bookstore filled with all sorts of Art/design/Culture-related magazines, I cannot remember the name of it, but still very inspiring. It could´ve meant some more kilos in the backpack, but like a pro I just picked up my copy of Lodown.
Shopping, we got an invite for a vice party the same night, we thought hey, cool/free booze. We browsed some more, then headed back to our meagre accommodation to freshen up. Right off Alexanderplatz, it shouldn´t have been too hard to find. We managed to spend an hour and half trying to locate it! Amateurs. Anyway, we found it. Taking the elevator all the way up, 15 stories or so, the place was located on the friggin´rooftop. nice place, with a nice view of the atomic clock- tower thing at Alexanderplatz. Place was packed, neither the music or the mural in progress had me enthused. No free drinks either, I ended up paying 4 euros for a 33cl bottle of Carlsberg! Probably the most expensive beer on our trip. A Danish beer! In Berlin! At a Vice party! It wasn´t even a Pint! Something is wrong with the world, we can´t just accept it.
Vice... your party sucked!
Next morning we tried to sneak out to go about our business. Suddenly, out of nowhere pops this old really friendly Korean guy (Apparently he was the owner of the before mentioned establishment.) he wouldn´t let us leave until he had served us a cup of coffee, truly insisting upon it. We came to love this charming Korean geezer who didn´t know a word of english and took our picture. It´s weird how a thing like that can turn your impressions all the way around. (service, service). This day went about with a lot of the same content as the previous. One major difference was walking all the way around Tierpark (the BIG city park) trying to find a zoo that din´t exist. (apparently the name of the zoo was Tiergarten) Our mistake. Oh, and we also did some touristy things: Berlin wall, Checkpoint Charlie and Topography of terror. We had indian for dinner and went to bed to get up early next morning.
Away we go to... (guess what´s next)
Monday, August 2, 2010
Traveling Europe Summary Part 1
Paris, France
One little bit of advice: Never fly ryan air. When we arrived at the airport, we found out there was no train. The Closest train station was at Disneyland and in order to get there we had to take the bus for two hours. from then on a 45 minute train ride. This was the first major blow for our next to nonexistent budget.
Finally we arrived at the hostel, chilled out for a bit then we decided to check out Colette for some posh Parisian window shopping. Nice place, three stories with a cafe in the basement. It´s definately the most immense streetwear/ culture shop I´ve been to. If you are in Paris, you should chek it out.
After that we bought some fresh baguettes, mustard, sausage and chevre cheese (french goat-cheese) and enjoyed our meal in the shade of the eiffel tower. for some reason I haven´t gotten to scanning any of the pictures from France, therefore I am borrowing from google.
My mission whilst in france was to pick up an issue of Fixé magazine, a magazine about fixed gear culture made by the people behind Cream Bmx magazine. So I managed to do and found it quite excellent.
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