7000. M32 roundabout J3 (692)

Kid Crayon, M32 roundabout, Bristol, May 2025
Kid Crayon, M32 roundabout, Bristol, May 2025

A little bit of a landmark this morning, with my seven thousandth street art blog post, which is quite a few really. When I set out on this adventure in 2015, the blog was set up to share my diary and log from a life-changing experience I had, working with the fisheries department in the Falkland Islands.

In the early days, I simultaneously started to notice the street art and graffiti around me in my adopted home, Bristol. I started posting the odd piece, mainly because nobody else was at that time, and I wanted to share what I saw and found out with others, and to lay down an archive of this ephemeral art form. And here we are, still going strong and with a bigger street art scene than ever before.

Kid Crayon, M32 roundabout, Bristol, May 2025
Kid Crayon, M32 roundabout, Bristol, May 2025

It is fitting that this milestone piece is by Kid Crayon, because it was his unusual and surreal wheatpaste portraits that originally captured my imagination and motivated me to blog about this stuff. I was lucky enough to catch up with Kid Crayon and Tera while they were painting this wall, but alas, Tera’s piece was painted over by the time I returned to get clean photographs. Kid Crayon has produced a fabulous piece with some great colour fills discrete to each letter and a wonderful one-eyed character making up the ‘o’. The floating crayon in front of the character’s mouth is a signature motif used by Kid Crayon for at least a decade. Splendid stuff.

Asian Lady Beetle

Asian lady beetle (Harmonis axyridis), Nostell Gardens, West Yorkshire, June 2025
Asian lady beetle (Harmonis axyridis), Nostell Gardens, West Yorkshire, June 2025

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Deep flower border

swirling sea of green and pink

and a large ladybird

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by Scooj

6999. Purdown (90)

Dobz, Purdown, Bristol, May 2025
Dobz, Purdown, Bristol, May 2025

When I see painted toadstools, I immediately think of Lis (Le Imposter Designs), but something held me back from posting this one under her name, because it wasn’t signed, which she usually does, and there was something that just didn’t quite fit her style. A little bit of research led me to Dobz, who also, it seems, has a bit of a thing for fungi.

Dobz, Purdown, Bristol, May 2025
Dobz, Purdown, Bristol, May 2025

I don’t know much about Dobz other than a few mushroom pieces that have appeared in the last month or so about the place. I can’t say whether they are a resident of Bristol or just passing through and dropping a few ‘shrooms en route. These day glow toadstools are beautifully presented, with great multi-tone shading and thick vibrant borders. Really eye-catching stuff up at Purdown.

6998. Cumberland Basin

Endz, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, June 2025
Endz, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, June 2025

Unsigned pieces are always difficult to identify, but I have hit upon a bit of reverse engineering in my thinking; as well as looking for clues in the lettering or style of the piece, I also think about which artists I know that never sign their work, and this often leads me to a small pool of artists to investigate. Endz is one of those artists, and closer scrutiny of the style (which varies considerably) helps to draw conclusions.

Endz, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, June 2025
Endz, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, June 2025

Endz also paints under another name in Bristol, but likes to keep the two identities separate. The sketchy style, which some might interpret as untidy, is deliberate and feels like it might have dropped out of a scrap book or something. The grey tones of the letters are interspersed with small blocks of orange that jazz the whole piece up a bit along with an orange border. Interesting work from Endz, and certainly a little different from the mainstream.

Dark-saddled leucozona

Dark-saddled leucozona, Leucozona laternaria, Lawrence Weston, Bristol, June 2025
Dark-saddled leucozona, Leucozona laternaria, Lawrence Weston, Bristol, June 2025

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Hoverfly heaven

every floret head a table

each flower, a glass

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by Scooj

6997. St Werburghs tunnel (510)

Werm, St Werburghs, Bristol, June 2025
Werm, St Werburghs, Bristol, June 2025

I think I have probably laboured the point in blog posts passim about my aversion to brown tones in street art, but it seems to be the ‘flavour of the month’ at the moment, so I will just have to get used to it. Strictly speaking, this piece by Werm isn’t brown, but it has that brown complexion to it.

Werm, St Werburghs, Bristol, June 2025
Werm, St Werburghs, Bristol, June 2025

Colour selection aside, this is a marvellous technical piece of graffiti writing, spelling WERM, but cunningly designed to almost disappear as letters and reappear as shapes instead. The spheres around the outside soften the hard edges of the writing in this beautifully presented piece, painted as part of Wispa’s birthday celebration paint jam.

6996. Lower Park Row

Lucy Danielle, Lower Park Row, Bristol, June 2025
Lucy Danielle, Lower Park Row, Bristol, June 2025

On one of my recent and rather infrequent walks to work, I came across this piece by Lucy Danielle and I think curated by Global Street art. I have inly seen her work once before (I think) and that was in Leicester last year, as part of the ‘Bring the Paint’ festival.

Lucy Danielle, Lower Park Row, Bristol, June 2025
Lucy Danielle, Lower Park Row, Bristol, June 2025

In this large mural, Lucy Danielle has combined some abstract illustration with a portrait that is split in the middle, with one half being photorealistic and the other a comic-like illustration. I can’t tell if the graffiti on the GWR train is part of the artwork, or has been artfully added by a tagger subsequently. The whole thing is a bright and colourful addition, in this tucked away street.

6995. Mina Road (15)

Stivs and Vane, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025
Stivs and Vane, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025

This wall, I believe, is owned by the householder behind it who has been happy to give permission to Silent Hobo, in the past, and more recently Stivs and Vane to decorate the wall. This recent makeover is their second collaboration here, and they have created something truly beautiful.

Vane, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025
Vane, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025

The art nouveau style of this two-part collaboration is not only really unusual, but arresting, and perhaps something you might expect to see on the near continent rather than in Bristol. Vane’s photorealistic portrait is engulfed in flowers and surrounded with a stunning art nouveau design, not unlike the metro signs in Paris.

Stivs, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025
Stivs, Mina Road, Bristol, May 2025

Stivs continuers the theme, with the highly designed background and floral decoration, and also includes a portrait, although one that is perhaps slightly less photorealistic. This collaboration is as outstanding as it is unexpected. A very special piece.

6994. Brunel Way (319)

Corupt, Brunel Way, Bristol, May 2025
Corupt, Brunel Way, Bristol, May 2025

This is simply a really classy piece from Corupt (who writes the letters ‘Corupt’ or ‘Stick’ mostly) on a wall/skate ramp, tucked away at the southern end of the Brunel Way spot.

Corupt, Brunel Way, Bristol, May 2025
Corupt, Brunel Way, Bristol, May 2025

The piece is good in every respect. The colour selections work beautifully, The quirky letters fill the space of the ramp perfectly, and the overall finishing is tight as a nut. Corupt has been turning out some outstanding pieces recently and i very highly regarded in his homeland of Hungary, so I am told.

Thursday Doors – 26 June 2025 – Doors of Leicester

Doors 313 – Leicester, Leicestershire (part III) – May 2024

This is the final selection of doors from a visit I made to Leicester with work in May 2024. I did however return in June 2024 and captured a whole load more doors, but I will save these for another day. While Leicester is the sort of city that you drive past or have to have a good reason to go there, it has an interesting history and special culture all of its own, and the surrounding countryside is quite beautiful.

I hope you enjoy the final selection in this series:

Arrivals gateway at Leicester Station, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Arrivals gateway at Leicester Station, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Ornate Indian restaurant door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Ornate Indian restaurant door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Gate and black door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Gate and black door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Ordinary door to the thinnest of buildings, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Ordinary door to the thinnest of buildings, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Fancy doorway with as utilitarian door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Fancy doorway with as utilitarian door, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Grey door to the disused Carron Buildings, Rutland Street, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Grey door to the disused Carron Buildings, Rutland Street, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Three doors into the Secular Society secular hall, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Three doors into the Secular Society secular hall, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Ghost door on the weighbridge toll collector's house, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Ghost door on the weighbridge toll collector’s house, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Large arched door with ornate balcony, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024
Large arched door with ornate balcony, Leicester, Leicestershire, May 2024

Well that’s it for another week and the end of this visit to Leicester. Something different to come next time.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

Thursday Doors