Cheeming Boey, an artist who does pen - and - ink
drawings on coffee cups, has pages and pages of content on his Flickr account.
Not exact matches
With aging boomers making up the majority of its most loyal customers, the
coffee chain is keen
on drawing in younger consumers, says Doug Hunter, author of Double Double: How Tim Hortons Became a Canadian Way of Life, One
Cup at a Time.
Anniversaries, TV shows, movies, documentaries and even little old publishers with good intentions and limited funds can
draw people's attention to the wealth of truly classic literature available in individual slices for less than a
cup of
coffee, but it takes a co-ordinated and sustained effort, based
on nothing more or less than a belief in the inherent worth, to individuals, to society and, especially, to children and young people, of great books and of the power of reading.
His intricate pen and ink
drawings on used
coffee cups form part of a decentred practice.
Gwyneth Leech
drew so much attention as she filled the space with her
drawings on takeout
coffee cups that the adjacent phone store has given it a longer life.