December 2010 17 posts

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

01

02

03

Today Is My Birthday

04

05

The Vanishing New York Accent

06

07

“Designing Media” by Bill Moggridge

08

Editorial Designer Francesco Franchi

09

10

11

12

13

14

Predictions for 2011 from the Year 1931

15

iOS Fonts

16

Tivoli Model One

17

18

The Suits of James Bond

19

20

NYT: New York City Wants a New Graduate School of Engineering

21

Moving to a New MacThe Other “Contempt”

22

Real Estate

23

A Sketchbook BookBig Active Music “Packaging” for Mark Ronson

24

A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector

25

26

Basic Maths Post-Xmas Sale Starts Today

27

28

2010 Additions to the National Film Registry

29

30

31

Tue 28 Dec
2010

2010 Additions to the National Film Registry

The Library of Congress announced the addition of twenty-five films to the National Film Registry today. Some of them, like “All the President’s Men” seem overdue, but others, like “Airplane!” are inspired and welcome. It was a big year for George Lucas, too; both “The Empire Strikes Back” and his legendary 1967 student film “Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB” were also added. Read the full press release.

Sun 26 Dec
2010

Basic Maths Post-Xmas Sale Starts Today

9:01 AM
Remarks (2)

Last year my friend Allan Cole and I decided to put Basic Maths, our Subtraction.com-based theme for WordPress, on sale for the week right after Christmas. We figured it would be a nice opportunity for people who might have had the week off of work and were thinking about overhauling their blogs to get their hands on our theme for a third-off the normal pricing. The response was unexpectedly strong — who knew so many folks would have blogging on their minds during the quietest week of the year — and so this holiday season, with a new update recently released, we’ve decided to do it again: Basic Maths is on sale through the last day of the year for 33% off the regular price, bringing it down to just US$30. If you haven’t already got your copy — and remember, the new version includes a terrific mobile-friendly version of the blog theme — here’s your chance to get a great deal. But hurry, it only runs for a few days and we won’t put it on sale again for at least another year. Click here to read more or buy a copy.

Fri 24 Dec
2010

A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector

In general I enjoy the holiday season, but I have a tepid relationship with Christmas music. That is, unless what’s playing is the phenomenal album “A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector.” This 1963 release features a dozen sterling tracks from a few of Spector’s then-current stable of artists: The Crystals, Bob B. Soxx & The Blue Jeans, The Ronettes and Darlene Love, whose definitive performance of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” is probably my favorite holiday song of all time. This is a wonderful, wonderful record.

Read a little bit more about this album over at Aquarium Drunkyard, or download the tracks from Amazon.com for a mere US$5.00. That’s a gift in and of itself. And have yourself a merry little Christmas, everyone.

Thu 23 Dec
2010

A Sketchbook Book

4:23 PM
Remarks (11)

If you’re still looking for a great holiday present, It’s not too late to run down to your local bookseller or order overnight delivery for this terrific book I just got my hands on: it’s called “Graphic: Inside the Sketchbook of the World’s Great Graphic Designers,” and it’s another production from the prolific Steven Heller, who co-edited the book with Lita Talarico.

Full disclosure: I was lucky enough to be included within the 352 pages of drawings, doodles, paintings, collage and random visual goodness from over one hundred prominent graphic designers. On page 340 (the book is organized alphabetically by last name) you’ll find about a dozen sample pages taken from the many sketchbooks that I’ve kept over the years. In addition to my own work, there are samples from a ton of amazing luminaries including Gary Baseman, Michael Bierut, Henrik Drescher, Seymour Chwast, Milton Glaser, Bruce Mau, Christoph Niemann, Art Spiegelman and many others.

Big Active Music “Packaging” for Mark Ronson

Eye Magazine spotlights London design studio Big Active’s amusing response to the challenge of contemporary music packaging. Digital music formats have essentially destroyed the album cover, so for a release from Mark Ronson & the Business Intl, Big Active created a barrage of record covers embedded with the music via the capable but little-promoted iTunes LP format. The experience approximates flipping through Ronson’s record collection (which explains why the designs are cheekily reminiscent of the 1980s), a recreational activity that is becoming fetishized as quickly as it disappears.

Read more, including a link to an interview with Big Active, at Eye Magazine’s site.

Wed 22 Dec
2010

Real Estate

6:48 PM
Remarks (7)

Via screen sharing, nested views of my two older Macs from my new Mac.

Tue 21 Dec
2010

Moving to a New Mac

9:44 PM
Remarks (12)

The 24-in. iMac that I’ve owned for four years is now retired. In its place, I’ve got a brand new, 27-in. iMac with a speedy i5 processor and a capacious hard drive. I’ve actually had this new machine since just after Thanksgiving. I didn’t set it up until this past weekend, partly due to my hectic work and family schedules and partly due to the fact that I was dreading the setup process.

In the past, it’s been my habit to take the route of many conscientious geeks, opting to build each new system from scratch. That’s always meant manually installing every application and every utility, re-creating every preference or setting from scratch. Very time consuming, yes, but it always gave me peace of mind that my new system was truly a fresh start, free of the cruft that had accreted in my previous system.

The Other “Contempt”

The Spanish and Italian releases of Jean Luc-Godard’s 1963 film “Contempt” — an almost perversely gorgeous exploration of disaffection — featured an alternative and somewhat unofficial musical score by composer Piero Piccioni. Apparently, no currently available releases of the movie — whether authorized or bootlegged — feature this alternative score, so in many ways it’s a nearly forgotten footnote of cinematic history. Thankfully, the excellent film site Mubi has five pieces from the score that are available for listening over here. They’re delightfully evocative of the playfulness of the era, as well as of the underlying, vague sense of dread that the film touches on. Worth a listen.

Mon 20 Dec
2010

NYT: New York City Wants a New Graduate School of Engineering

“Worried that New York City is not spawning enough technology-based start-up companies with the potential to become big employers like Google, city officials are inviting universities around the world to create an engineering campus on city-owned land.”

Let’s hope this happens, and if it does, let’s hope the school just doesn’t turn into a feeder channel for the financial services industry.

Sat 18 Dec
2010

The Suits of James Bond

An awesome, new(ish) blog examining the wardrobe details of the James Bond franchise in penetrating detail. The author’s sartorial knowledge is shockingly complete and edifying. For those who appreciate or are fascinated by the subtle semantics of men’s dress, every post is a pleasure to read.

Thu 16 Dec
2010

Tivoli Model One

For my birthday a few weeks ago I received this Tivoli Model One table radio as a gift from my mother. It’s basically a very simple, very solidly built AM/FM tuner. Here’s what came in the box: the radio itself and a power cable. Oh, and a brief manual that I didn’t even bother reading.

Tivoli Model One

Set-up took about a minute: attach the cable to the back of the unit and then plug it into a wall and it was working. The tuning dial feels so substantial in its turning motion — incredibly precise, incredibly well-manufactured — that it has the feel of luxury. Not the flashy, superficial notion that passes for most luxury these days, which is really more about price tags than build quality. Rather this radio exudes a truly ‘high end’ sensibility that suggests enough thought and care have been invested in its design and engineering that the whole unit could last several decades.

I know that radio designers and engineers have almost a century of best practices and technological refinement at their backs when they sit down to create a product like the Model One. And it’s perhaps unrealistic to expect that today’s constantly changing networked technology products could work like this, could be so simple and solid. But it still made me wish that all electronic products could offer an out-of-the-box experience as satisfying as this. (Get yours at Amazon through this link and I get a little kickback.)

Wed 15 Dec
2010

iOS Fonts

A rundown of (most of) the typefaces available on Apple’s devices, comparing what’s available on iPad versus iPhone. Looking at the full inventory like this, it’s surprising to me to see some of the fonts that Apple deliberately chose to include on the iPad. Zapfino, Copperplate, Bradley Hand and others strike me as running counter to the Apple design sensibility. See the full inventory here.

Tue 14 Dec
2010

Predictions for 2011 from the Year 1931

“Way back on September 13, 1931, The New York Times, founded in 1851, decided to celebrate its 80th anniversary by asking a few of the day’s visionaries about their predictions of 2011 — 80 years in their future. Those assembled were big names for 1931: physician and Mayo Clinic co-founder W. J. Mayo, famed industrialist Henry Ford, anatomist and anthropologist Arthur Keith, physicist and Nobel laureate Arthur Compton, chemist Willis R. Whitney, physicist and Nobel laureate Robert Millikan, physicist and chemist Michael Pupin, and sociologist William F. Ogburn.”

Wed 08 Dec
2010

Editorial Designer Francesco Franchi

I’ve come across the work of this Italian editorial designer a few times, and each time I stop whatever I’m doing and marvel. His work for the Italian magazine Intelligence in Lifestyle is preternaturally precise, rich and bold.

Helpfully for those of us who would be students of his work, a trove of Franchi’s samples can be found over at his Flickr stream.

Tue 07 Dec
2010

“Designing Media” by Bill Moggridge

Moggridge is a renowned interaction designer and the director of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. His new book “examines connections and conflicts between old and new media, describing how the [mainstream media] have changed and how new patterns of media consumption are emerging.” It’s composed of Moggridge’s interviews with almost forty prominent people shaping media today.

You can buy the book Amazon. Over at the marketing site, there’s a wealth of interview segments available.

Sun 05 Dec
2010

The Vanishing New York Accent

An interview with Bronx-born filmmaker Heather Quinlan, who is working on a documentary about the gradual disappearance of the classic New Yawk accent. Fascinating.

Fri 03 Dec
2010

Today Is My Birthday

11:24 AM
Remarks (15)

My mom sent me this picture of me on my eleventh birthday.