Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Images of the Day: The Commute Home

While sitting and enjoying our supper outside, I happened to spy the evening commute of our local sprite-like companions. Since it was forecast rain and thunderstorms throughout the day, they were wearing their rain-capes. Below is what we captured before they disappeared into the elm tree and apparated away until tomorrow.

Supplying a bit of aid and assistance.











The moment: A hidden kiss




This is just a little spooky looking.






Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Everything is a Remix: The Elements of Creativity


via brainpickings
“…Kirby Ferguson’s excellent Everything is a Remix project is one of the most important efforts to illuminate the mechanisms, paradoxes and central principles of creative culture in modern history — an ambitious four-part documentary on the history and cultural significance of sampling and collaborative creation, reflecting my own deep held belief that creativity is combinatorial….”
Learn more about the Everything is a Remix project here.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Image of the Day: Baltimore

The closed Public Works Museum, housed at a former pumping station, in Baltimore’s inner harbor district. A few ampersands spotted in the area can be found here.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Artful Lettering


via letterology
“Using Pelikan 4001 Brilliant Black fountain pen ink and a Soennecken 70# writing pad, we see graphic designer/calligrapher Frank Ortmann skillfully render some fine-looking letters for the the cover artwork for the record Max Goldt, L'Eglise des Crocodiles in 2011. First we look over his shoulder to see him pencil in some slanted guidelines for the letterforms with the use of a simple handmade guide. After he carefully pencils in each letter of his layout, he selects an antique extra fine pen nib used for copperplate writing and inks in his letters while applying various degrees of pressure to create the thickness of each stroke. Lastly he scans the image and does the final edit in Photoshop to create the lovely work of lettering seen on the album cover…”
Read the rest and watch the video here. Be sure to drop in to iampeth where you can find endless examples of rare penmanship books to peruse. 

Dropp


via imprint
“Finally, a social application worth looking into: Dropp untethers you from the website-as social-destination concept. This little app does something neat: lets you leave messages in real-world places, wherever you go, for others to find. You can leave your messages for everyone, or for specific people, and when their iPhones, also running Dropp, come near, they’ll get an an alert. You can leave behind little messages, pictures, prizes for a surprise contest, treasure hunt clues, the possibilities are pretty cool to consider. The app is brand new, and as such still feels kinda 1.0, but I would expect updates and additional functions to happen rapidly. It’s free for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad from the App Store.”
Find out more here.

Arem Bartholl’s Google Map Installations


Map at ‘Gateways,’ KUMU, Tallinn, Estonia, May 2011

via designobserver
“…Bartholl’s Map installations involved setting up a large physical version of the pin in several locales, at the exact spot where Google Maps assumes to be the center of the city.”
Find out more about the installations here.



Paul Rand: A Designer’s Words


via Steven Heller’s imprint
“On April 3, 1998 the School of Visual Arts held a Paul Rand Symposium in New York City. To commemorate the event Nathan Garland, Georgette Ballance and [Steven Heller] edited a keepsake titled Paul Rand: A Designer’s Words, a collection of many Rand quotes from various sources. It was printed by Rand’s favorite printer, Mossberg & Co., typeset by his favorite typesetters, PDR (A Division of AGT), and produced with his favorite paper, Mohawk Superfine. Nathan Garland’s design was true to Rand’s typographic aesthetic. Only 500 copies of the keepsake were printed, given free to the symposium participants and sold through Emigre, among other limited venues (only a few rarities remain)...”
Now, Steven Heller has made it available to all via PDF. If you would like to download go here or here.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Make the Logo Smaller Mugs


via how
Typography Shop has just released their first mug: Make the Logo Smaller.
Find out more and order it hereThis makes me smile. 

Keep calm and read on


via idsgn
“There are multiple Tumblr blogs dedicated to its multitude of variants: “Keep Calm and Use the Force,” “Keep Calm and Carry On My Wayward Son,” “Keep Calm and Beam Me Up Scotty.” As a designer I am visually assaulted and overwhelmed by the enormous amount of adaptations the “Keep Calm and Carry On” print has seen. However, upon searching deeper into the mystery of this culturally iconic print, there’s a history filled with war, panic, and invasion.”
Read the rest here.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The Unsung Heroes of Biscuit Embossing


The evolution of the Oreo emboss, from 1912, to 1924, to today

via ediblegeography
“…despite the iconic status of the Oreo emboss today, the identity of its designer remains murky. Many Internet resources have credited William Turnier as the man behind the four-leaf clover and serrated-edge design, but Nabisco could confirm only that a man by that name worked for the company during that time as a ‘design engineer.’ ”
Read the rest here.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Pantone Graduate Procession


spotted by my son on neatorama
“…Graphic Design Majors of the CalPoly Pomona graduating class of 2011, who received their diplomas last night, decorated their mortarboards with an oversized Pantone chip.”
See another image here.

“Inspiration is for amateurs; the rest of us just show up and get to work.”


via quotevadis
— Chuck Close, an American painter and photographer who achieved fame as a photorealist, through his massive-scale portraits. Though a catastrophic spinal artery collapse in 1988 left him severely paralyzed, he has continued to paint and produce work that remains sought after by museums and collectors.

Angry crows dive-bomb officers in Everett, Wash.


The Twa Corbies (c.1919)
by Arthur Rackham

via boingboing
“An Everett, Washington police department is under attack by a flock of crows. According to the Associated Press, the birds have been ‘swooping down and dive-bombing the officers as they walk to and from their cars’ in the police station parking lot…”
Read the rest here.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Smithsonian: Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum

I recently spent a few morning hours exploring the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum with my daughter-in-law and wife. We took our time wandering through the two current exhibitions “Set in Style: The Jewelry of Van Cleef & Arpels” and “Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay” as well as the gift shop. It was interesting to see the many influences of the world on the designers in the exhibitions, and then back again as their designs influenced the world. I was particularly impressed by the Chinese Magician pocket watch, the transforming zipper jewelry, and the Bronx Cocktail bracelet. The old ledgers documenting the design process were a very nice addition as well.


I hope someday to visit the the Museum’s Drue Heinz Study Center for Drawings and Prints which is currently closed. It houses more than 160,000 works of art dating from the Renaissance to the present related to the history of European and American art and design. The collection includes designs for architecture, decorative arts, gardens, interiors, ornament, jewelry, theater, textiles, graphic and industrial design, as well as the fine arts. You can browse through their holdings here.

The gift shop is a visual feast as well, with such wonders as the Hazelnut Box with Miniature Knife and Yoshida The Crow Model Airplane. “The Crow design was the first such model plane to ever be built and flown in Japan. It dates from 1889, when its inventor based his model on the crow’s wing span after studying them in flight.”






The Ampersand, Pt. 1


Graffiti from Pompeii, circa 79 AD.

via Shady Characters The secret life of punctuation
…the ampersand is an orphan: its creator is not known, and the closest it comes to a parent is the anonymous first century graffiti artist who scrawled it hastily across a Pompeiian wall.”
Read the rest here.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

How To Disable Facebook’s Automatic Facial Recognition Service


via maclife
“Facebook recently introduced a new facial recognition service that allows for easier photo tagging. However, the problem is that many users may not appreciate this feature, and consider it a privacy concern. Fortunately, Facebook did enable the ability to turn off this feature…”
Find out how, here.

Synesthesia’s role in creativity: Pt. 3


via imprint
“…the premise of synesthesia offers a jumping-off point mainly for those creatives who don’t have it…”
Read the rest here.

Business Card of the Day

Picked up in Corning, NY. The front and back are indeed two different colors, though I am not sure why.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Business Card of the Day

Found posted on a bulletin board at Tractor Supply Company. I’m not entirely sure what a wildlife service person does . . . 

Friday, June 10, 2011

Business Cards: Page XXXIX

First off, a giganormous Thank You to the love of my life for taking the time to scan these pages for me! And so this post wraps up the page scans of business cards. In the future, if I come across any I find interesting—the good, the bad, and the ugly—I'll post them individually. I hope you enjoyed looking through these as much I have.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Section 2 of The Highline Opens


via designboom
“Featuring a number of new design features, section 2 of the one mile long urban park is open to the public. The one mile long urban park is recycled from the former elevated freight railroad spur and runs from Gansevvort Street in the Meatpacking District to west 34th street, between 10th and 11th avenues.”
See more images here.



Business Cards: Page XXXVIII


Monday, June 6, 2011

Business Cards: Page XXXV


Sleep May Restore Color Perception


via colourlovers
“Color perception drifts away from neutrality during wakefulness and is restored during sleep, suggests a research abstract presented in at SLEEP 2010, the 24th annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies LLC. Results indicate that prior wakefulness caused the color gray to be classified as having a slightly but significantly greenish tint. Overnight sleep restored perception to achromatic equilibrium so that gray was perceived as gray...”
Read the rest here.

Cocktail Colors Seen Through the Microscope


Gin & Tonic

via colourlovers
BevShot images are made by first crystallizing the drink of choice on a lab slide. Using a standard light microscope with a camera attached, the light source is polarized and passed through the crystal. This creates the colors we see…”
Read the rest here.



Earworm of the Day: Nothing Else Matters‬ by‪ Scala & Kolacny Brothers



Sunday, June 5, 2011

A Crow Chick Visits

A big thank you to true-indigo for taking these movies.

Savage Chickens: Cat Adventures Episode 8

Indigo: The Colour that Seduced the World


Indigo by Catherine E McKinley
will be published in August 2011

via delancyplace
“Until the most recent times, color dyes were rare and precious commodities upon which power and fortunes were built. Indigo, the brilliant blue dye made from plants, was one of America's slavery-based cash crops. But long before it was exported by America, indigo dye had been one of the world's great treasures for thousands of years. Referred to by some as blue gold, it caught the imagination of connoisseurs, and merchants and colonialists with its power to bewitch and its transcendent beauty — and the value and demand for indigo became ungovernable. It sparked bitter trade wars, and touched off impassioned European and North American legislation and political debate and became known as The Devil’s Dye.”
Read the rest here.

Making Faces: Metal Type in the 21st Century


via nytimes
Making Faces: Metal Type in the 21st Century is a new documentary by Richard Kegler. It is a video document of the late Jim Rimmer, the Canadian designer of almost 200 typefaces. In the film, Rimmer, who died in 2010, painstakingly demonstrates the lost art of pantographic type making. The pantograph is a mechanical device, based on parallelograms, which allows the movement of one pen, in tracing an image, to replicate that movement with a second pen. A craftsperson can draw on one side at a particular size, and on the other the type is “reproduced” at a chosen point size…”

“Is producing this display of vintage technology simply hanging on to the old for dear life, or is there a good reason for designers to know these processes? Kegler responds: “In any field of expertise there is a history and a cumulative reason that things are the way they are. How many Adobe Illustrator users know that kerning, leading, picas and points are terms that should have absolutely no relevance on the computer, but do, since they are direct analogies to the terms and processes of hundreds of years ago? The more time that designers spend on the screen, the more valuable the hand processes become. There is great subtlety and unique flavor in heirloom typefaces.”
Read more about the making of the documentary here, the DVD is available for order here, and the blog of Making Faces is here.




It’s hard to throw away a race number...


via the mehallo blog
Turn your Tivek racing numbers into custom clothing; a cap or windbreaker. By Rick at ElevenGear.
Info/order here.

99 Bottles; Their Caps on the Wall


via things neatly organized
“Arizona-based artist, William LeGoullon collected 99 bottle caps from one of his state’s remaining drive-in movie theaters as part of his Intermission series.”
See more of his work here.

Business Cards: Page XXXIV


Friday, June 3, 2011

Jim Cosgrove: No Mother Could Give More


via NPR
“This is egg laying season, if you're a bird. If you're an octopus, particularly a giant Pacific octopus, you've been there, done that. In fact, you died doing it, in what is the saddest mommy story I've heard in a long while. It comes from biologist Jim Cosgrove who describes it all in a lecture he calls, “No Mother Could Give More.’ ”
Read the rest here.

The Art Of Reproduction: 17 Ladies with Ermines


Lady With Ermine by Leonardo Da Vinci

via Visual Hint: Color of Data
“The web can seem like the perfect museum, holding all the world’s art. Type ‘Danae Klimt’ into your favorite search engine, and you conjure up a high-resolution image of Gustav Klimt’s Danaë: tan limbs, a shower of gold, red hair. Or did you find pink limbs? Or were they gray or even green? There’s the rub: the seemingly perfect museum holds dozens of Danaës—with dozens of different palettes. Even the shape changes as reproductions are subtly cropped.

Curious just how far reproductions stray from each other, we began an investigation. For a set of famous artworks, we downloaded all the plausible copies we could find. Then we wrote software to reconstruct each artwork as a mosaic, a patchwork quilt where each patch comes from an individual copy.

The discontinuities of color, texture and frame tell the story of the inaccuracies in reproduction, forming a tapestry of beautiful half-truths...”
Read the rest here, and visit the site here.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

United Pixelworkers

This shirt from United Pixelworkers makes me smile.

Celebrating Linotype, 125 Years Since Its Debut


via the atlantic
“Around for a century, Linotype machines were made obsolete in the 1970s by changing technologies -- but they have not been forgotten…”
Read the rest here.


Business Cards: Page XXXII


SLR Camera Simulator


via swissmiss
“Want to play around with SLR Camera settings and see how it affects your photo, but without actually using an SLR? Well, you can do just that with the Online SLR Camera Simulator. This simple application allows you to choose the lighting, ISO, shutter speed and aperture. A great tool to teach someone the basics of photography.”
Explore it here.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Should You Work for Free?


via liquidtreat
“It's a question that creative types encounter frequently, and the answer? Well, it depends. New York-based designer and illustrator Jessica Hische helps you reach an informed decision with her handy online flowchart, "Should I Work for Free?" Using only css and html (for speedy loading and Google-powered translation into 52 languages), she assists site visitors in analyzing their particular situation, whether the potential payment-free project is for a legitimate business, a charity or non-profit, your friend, or your mom. (That last one is an automatic yes.) Start from the middle of the chart and work outwards by answering yes or no questions -- Will they give you creative freedom? Are you masochistic? -- until you reach a clear answer, delivered with a morsel of parting advice from Hische.’
Works best with Firefox, here.

Who Did That?


Albrecht Durer’s monogram

via imprint

“Anon, short for anonymous, is as common in art history as Smith is in American telephone directories. Yet for a specific work to have its maker buried in an unmarked grave in history’s Potters Field is a sad epitaph indeed.

Credit implies ownership and accountability. Around the eighteenth century art became more commonly a function of individual creators who received credit. The term Anon is less commonly found in art histories of this era. In fact, the signature became an important component of a work, even for lesser artists.

While not on the lowest rung of the art hierarchy, illustrators and cartoonists of the nineteenth century started signing their wares as much for their personal satisfaction as for the recognition it afforded them in an increasingly competitive marketplace. And not only did the illustrator’s signature appear, so did the engraver’s and printmaker’s — akin to the lengthy acknowledgments found in contemporary graphic design annuals...”

Read the rest here.

Practical Principles


via letterology
“From an alphabet of tongue twisters originally published in 1836 and revised 100 years later by the Mergenthaler Linotype Corporation. This 1936 edition of Peter Piper’s Practical Principles of Plain and Perfect Pronunciation was designed and illustrated by some of the most celebrated typographers and designers of the day…”
See more examples here, and see the entire book on view at Dr. Chris Mullen's amazing site, The Visual Telling of Stories, here.

Vintage Marvels: Commas


via swissmiss
From an Etsy shop called Vintage Marvels. Makes me smile.