March 2010 8 posts

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Why Can’t the World’s Best Architects Build Better Web Sites?Out of the Office

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Creative Director Mark Porter to Leave The GuardianThe League of Moveable Type

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Weeks without Tweets

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Interview with Typographer Panos Vassilou

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Burn-on-Demand MoviesLost: The Animated Series

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Adding Up Basic Maths

Wed 31 Mar
2010

Adding Up Basic Maths

8:30 PM
Remarks (33)

Since last November’s release of Basic Maths — the commercially-available, Subtraction.com-based theme for WordPress that I designed and developed with Allan Cole — I’ve been asked from time to time by friends and acquaintances how well it’s fared. My answer is usually that sales have been healthy but not spectacular, that I’m satisfied with the revenue that the theme has brought in, but also that it’s hardly enough for me to quit my day job.

As soon as I started having these conversations I began to realize that very few people really have a sense of what makes for a successful commercial theme, at least not numbers-wise. This included me, too, especially at the outset of my foray into the market, when my most specific ambition was basically ‘to sell a lot.’ Now with a little bit of experience under my belt, I certainly have a better idea of how to define success, but it’s based exclusively on my own personal experiences selling Basic Maths, with the benefit of very little if any intelligence from other commercial theme developers.

With that in mind, I decided early on that, when I had a sufficient amount of sales data logged, I’d try and share it so that others might benefit from it. Basic Maths was released on 14 Nov of last year, so there’s just over four months of records available to me; not a tremendous amount, but certainly enough to draw some early lessons regarding how theme sales work.

Tue 30 Mar
2010

Burn-on-Demand Movies

Did you realize that a score of classic (and some not-so-classic) MGM films can be purchased on a burn-on-demand basis as of right now? The so-called “MGM Limited Collection” is available at this Amazon.com page. This seems like a fairly noteworthy innovation, though I’ve heard very little about it. That this collection brings back to light some obscure and little-seen films is a good thing, but unfortunately, the on-demand nature of the selection seems to preclude any of these movies from being rentable at Netflix or other sources.

Lost: The Animated Series

Pursuant to my newly acquired, casual interest in “Lost,” I felt I should at least make note of this thoroughly great set of drawings by illustrator Michael Blaine Myers Jr. for a hypothetical Saturday morning cartoon-style version of everyone’s favorite island mystery drama. See the full gallery here.

Lost: The Animated Series

Mon 29 Mar
2010

Interview with Typographer Panos Vassilou

The type site MyFonts poses questions to the man behind the Greek type foundry Parachute, and the creator of the wonderful formal script typeface Champion Script Pro. Big surprise: I very rarely find myself in need of the rich flourishes of a formal script face, but in the event that I ever do, Champion Script Pro would be at the top of my list; it’s gorgeous. Read the full interview.

Sun 28 Mar
2010

Weeks without Tweets

10:48 PM
Remarks (8)

Have you ever had that feeling of nagging guilt, the kind that slowly simmers inside of you when you know you haven’t been keeping up with something you really should be keeping up with? Like bills piling up on your desk, or your office email left unchecked for days, or medicines not taken daily or as prescribed by your doctor? That’s sort of the feeling I have right now.

I took most of this month off from posting to this blog, but it’s been at least four or five weeks since I’ve logged into my Twitter account. At first I welcomed the respite, the break from posting updates regularly or coming up with interesting things to say. Then I began to miss it a little as I started accumulating a little backlog of ideas and links I wanted to tweet. Somewhere in the middle of the month though, it turned to a kind of dread of the unanswered queries and unrequited mentions, and now I have outright anxiety over wading through whatever awaits me there on the other side of that login. Urgh. Social media is too much work.

Fri 26 Mar
2010

Creative Director Mark Porter to Leave The Guardian

An unfortunate loss for a great newspaper. Porter has at least two distinctions of which he can be very proud: first, he was responsible for the stunning and justly praised redesign of the printed newspaper in 2005; and second, he rolled up his sleeves and with great humility and earnestness learned how to design for the Web in order to helm the design direction of Guardian.co.uk for the past several years. Under his direction, that site has been a continual source of inspiration to me, and it’s still well worth studying for anyone interested in publishing design. For my money, he may have made one of the most successful transitions to the digital medium of any print designer ever; there are scant few print-trained designers of any caliber who can match his canny grasp of what it means to design for the new century.

Read the full farewell note here.

The League of Moveable Type

Not a British fan society for SixApart’s flagship blog engine, but rather a clearing house for completely free typefaces available for download. At first glance, I was a little underwhelmed at the originality of the typefaces on offer, but at closer inspection they’re of commendably high quality. The first and most prominently displayed in their gallery, Matt McInerney’s Raleway, shown below, is quite nice on its own and quite amazing when you consider that it costs a total of none dollars. See the whole collection here.

Raleway

Thanks to Gong Szeto for the link.

Thu 25 Mar
2010

Why Can’t the World’s Best Architects Build Better Web Sites?

Writing for Fast Company, design journalist Alissa Walker argues: “Architects are the original interactive designers. They’re skilled at creating navigable structures. They specialize in designing rich experiences for their users. But if architects designed their buildings the way they designed their Web sites, they’d all fall apart.”

I might say that the truth is that architects design sites that fall apart because they can’t design buildings that fall apart — and that they secretly yearn to do just that. Well, they don’t yearn to make unstable structures, but they do yearn to indluge their more fanciful ideas about spaces (albeit virtual spaces) free of the constraints of making them physically accommodating to real people. The Web is their opportunity to do just that, partly because a lot of these architects, in my estimation, just don’t take the Web that seriously, or at least seriously enough to really understand it before building for it. Read the full article here.

Out of the Office

11:32 AM
Remarks (10)

What’s happening on this blog? Let me explain: for the past several weeks, I have been deeply engaged in an experiment I call “not blogging.” It’s a weird, wild alternative style of living in which I refrain from posting long, rambling diatribes on poorly-researched design topics close to my heart. Additionally, I have even abstained from the indulgence of publishing those shorter, no less inconsequential regurgitations of links you can already easily find elsewhere on the designy Interweb. In short, nothing’s going on here.

Instead, I’ve used most of this month to turn my attention instead to three other projects that have preoccupied my time. Two of them I can’t really speak about at this point, except to say one involves a new Web site and another involves ink printed on paper, the way they used to do it way back in the early years of the twenty-first century. You’ll be hearing more about both within a few months.