An Illustrator who loves Pugs? Yesss.
- Images by Gemma Correll
Hack Things Better [a.k.a What Your Getting For X-mas From Me]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=82_mFqRlE6g
The Innovator's Cookbook
You may have to watch it twice. The first time, really listen to the narrator.
The second time, watch how they used 3D Printing to make the book cover.
The best part, is about the instruments.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2EqxdvOKVc&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&version=3]
NEW letterpress business cards!
A New Relationship to Money
[vimeo 8687128]
Game of Life
Obviously, I'm behind the curve here... but in honor of finishing The Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson AND my fantastic web design professor, who showed me this, I thought I'd share. Enjoy: http://youtu.be/FdMzngWchDk
Branding for wines, spirits, and beers... Part II.
This past summer, I stumbled upon CF Napa [whole portfolio here] and was really impressed. A firm that designs exclusively for wines, spirits, and beers? HOW GREAT! But look at the pretty things I have stumbled upon since then!! Check out these great labels by the New Zealand firm Supply.
The first one is so simple and smart, I barely think I could have ever thought of something so punny. I love punny things.
The use of botany-style illustrations in these ciders is so beautiful. Classy. I really wanna try making something this one day.
Gumball Poster
This American Life = Ethnographic Research
Today, I finished wrapping up a long good weekend by listening to This American Life. The segment I listened to was on "Gossip" and it shared so many parallels with design and ethnographic research. Act I was about Gossip, AIDS, and Malawi. The segment critically proved how vital design research is in providing effective NGOs and programs for people. Here is a little blurb from the website:
In Malawi, in southeast Africa, not gossiping can be worse than gossiping. Sarah interviews a young Malawian woman named Hazel Namandingo, who explains that because so many people have HIV and AIDS in Malawi, they often rely on gossip to figure out who's safe to date or marry. It turns out this kind of gossip is the basis for a huge research project about AIDS in Malawi. For 10 years, a sociologist named Susan Watkins has been collecting journals filled with gossip about AIDS. Watkins hired local people to write the journals—to just listen to what people were saying in their communities about the virus, and then write it down. What Watkins learned from reading them bucked much of the conventional wisdom about how rural Africans were dealing with the epidemic. (Plus, they're really entertaining.)
There's a U Penn website that explains the Malawi Journals Project. And an NGO in Malawi called Invest in Knowledge has catalogued the journals.
I deeply encourage anyone who has the time to listen. Susan Watkins' research is so natural and intrinsic it is amazing how often innitiatives, much like hers, are overlooked. Smart and simple research is better than lots of research.
Visual Mind F***
http://youtu.be/yzC4hFK5P3g Check out the visuals on this Japanese music video. If this was a series of posters, it would equally be as awesome. There is some cool typeface action in the later half. Enjoy.
Thanks, Laura F.
National Museum of Women in the Arts
Here are some logos I made last week. They were for the National Museum of Women in the Arts in D.C. They were interesting to make. The design brief included instructions to use the building logo for the 25th anniversary and a predetermined color palette was already selected. We also had to use a tagline.
Final TNSchangemakers Logo
Technical Drawings that I need to make into infographics.
I lurve to make infographics and these technical drawings are inspirational. Can you imagine an infographic that looked as dynamic as these bad boys? Yawza!
One day, one day.
Drawings by James Bills
1st Draft of Some Flyers I'm Designing.
The Envisioning Development Toolkit
Gosh, I wish I could pace myself with these amazing web finds but they all sprang up on me today, on a Sunday! Well, this one is slightly more digestible (compared to THE UNIVERSE down below). You can click on neighborhoods in New York and see an interactive breakdown of incomes (divided into categories: Extremely Low, Very Low, Low, Moderate, Middle and High). Its pretty spectacular.
Tip: Click on a neighborhood. In the little black box where is shows statistics, click "Who can afford to live here?" and some awesome rent sliders come out. You'll understand what I'm talking about... When you do it.
THANK YOU FAST CO. FOR SHARING THIS:
I have spent a good part of my summer readying Bill Bryson. In a section, he gave a good run at explaining the expanding spherical universe. BUT NOW, we have videoooooo: [vimeo 24906175]
Whoa.
DESIGN QUOTE OF THE MONTH:
Boy, Oh Boy! Have I fallen behind. Well, since we skipped some months here is a good one:
When I am working on a problem, I never think about beauty. I only think about how to solve the problem. But when I have finished, if the solution isn’t beautiful, I know it is wrong.
— Richard Buckminster Fuller
One of my favorites.
Food for Thought: How to Be A Lobster
Ever wanted to be a lobster? Control those little extra legs, wiggle free at the bottom of the sea, and use your claws to dance? Well.... To find out how, you have to get past the worst wind instrument EVER. Its worth it, for those who can face the challenge: http://youtu.be/IwbGumZ-FYg
Oh yah. Nerd-y.