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Mon 26 Oct
2009
“The film is currently in production with a scheduled release date of spring 2010.”
Wed 14 Oct
2009
The Times’ T Magazine interviews the inventor of the bagless vacuum on his latest invention.
Thu 08 Oct
2009
The noted interface and usability expert identifies and solves the creeping problem of iPhone users running out space for all of their apps. “I have purposely made this new design compatible with the old, both so users wouldn’t face a sharp new learning curve and so that it might better pass the ‘Steve Test’: This new iPhone Springboard, unless and until such time as a user chooses to invoke the new features, could continue to look exactly the same as the app looks now.” I’m not entirely sure it would really pass the “Steve Test” though as it’s a little inelegant. Still, it’s smart thinking.
Wed 07 Oct
2009
I get a very minor mention on page fifty of Armin Vit and Bryony Gomez-Palacio’s new book, “Graphic Design, Referenced,” but that’s not why it’s worth blogging about. Rather, this book is notable as an ambitious and largely successful attempt at capturing the current state of graphic design, or at least its current state as seen through the uncommonly thorough gaze of two young, talented and already influential designer-editors.
Vit and Gomez-Palacio, operating under the name Under Consideration, were responsible for the now shuttered but once widely-read design criticism site Speak Up, where they played a key role in shaping the graphic design conversation over the past decade. Now, in “Graphic Design, Referenced,” they’ve capitalized on their rather breathtaking ability to pull off massive editorial feats with a kind of contemporary history of their chosen field, a beautiful, page-turner of a tome that aims to be “A Visual Guide to the Language, Applications, and History of Graphic Design.”
I received my copy in the mail not long ago and was frankly astonished when I opened it up. I was vaguely aware that they had been working on a book, but I had no idea that they had aimed so high. So I felt compelled to find out more and struck up an email conversation with Armin, a friend of mine, to find out more.
Matthew Carter, the original designer of both, has embarked on a project with Ascender Corp. and Microsoft to update these ubiquitous type families. The project “intends to optimize the Verdana and Georgia fonts for many new applications, including extended text formatting on Web sites and in print. The Georgia/Verdana project will provide a variety of enhancements to these fonts including: new weights and widths beyond the original four fonts in each family; extensions to the character sets; extensions to the kerning: OpenType typographic features for enhanced typography.” Expect the results to start rolling out early next year.
This project divides the original 1977 blockbuster into 473 fifteen-second clips, each claimed by a different volunteer who then re-creates and re-imagines their clip. As of this writing, one-hundred and sixteen clips remain unclaimed, so you still have a chance to take part in this project. Contributions so far range from slopply to earnest to satirical to artful, and everything in between. Via Swiss Miss.
A conversation between the leading graphic design historian and the famed author and illustrator of the immortal childrens’ book “Where the Wild Things Are.” This interview is part of the lead up to the soon-to-be-released Spike Jonze film adaptation (which looks amazing) as well as Wild Things Week in New York City, 12-16 Oct.
Tue 06 Oct
2009
Worth repeating here:
“Criticism is a study by which men grow important and formidable at a very small expense. The power of invention has been conferred by nature upon few, and the labor of learning those sciences, which may by mere labor be obtained, is too great to be willingly endured; but every man can exert such judgment as he has upon the works of others; and he whom nature has made weak, and idleness keeps ignorant, may yet support his vanity by the name of a critic.
“I hope it will give comfort to great numbers who are passing through the world in obscurity, when I inform them how easily distinction may be obtained. All the other powers of literature are coy and haughty, they must be long courted, and at last are not always gained; but Criticism is a goddess easy of access and forward of advance, who will meet the slow, and encourage the timorous; the want of meaning she supplies with words, and the want of spirit she recompenses with malignity.”
Ouch.
Sun 04 Oct
2009
Lists like these are no-win propositions, as just about everyone is bound to find at least a few albums with which to disagree. Case in point: I wouldn’t mind one bit if I never hear the albums that rank at numbers 2, 4, 7, 16, 18 or 20 again. Ever. On the other hand, I could listen to the number 1 album on loop. Forever.
Sat 03 Oct
2009
New project from illustrator Jessica Hische. “Each day, a new hand-crafted decorative initial cap will be posted for your enjoyment and for the beautification of blog posts everywhere.” Here’s my favorite so far.