Designing Modern Women, 1890-1990

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

A new exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

“Modern design of the twentieth century was profoundly shaped and enhanced by the creativity of women — as muses of modernity and shapers of new ways of living, and as designers, patrons, performers and educators. This installation, drawn entirely from MoMA’s collection, celebrates the diversity and vitality of individual artists’ engagement in the modern world, from Loïe Fuller’s pulsating turn-of-the-century performances to April Greiman’s 1980s computer-generated graphics, at the vanguard of early digital design.”

Included: Linder Sterling’s still awesome design for the Buzzcocks’ “Orgasm Addict.”

Buzzcocks

More information at MoMA.

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AIGA’s “False Choice”

Ratings

4 of 5 stars
What’s this?

AIGA recently put forward a proposal to sell its not quite iconic but still spiritually critical national headquarters, situated in a hugely desirable lot on Fifth Avenue in New York City. The building was bought in a fundraising campaign in 1994 — “The money was raised through blood, sweat and tears, and it was a grand moment in the organization’s then 80-year history” — and is now worth nearly twenty times what was paid for it.

A list of notable designers including Michael Bierut, Hugh Dubberly, Steven Heller, Paula Scher and others believe this proposal is ill advised, and in this blog post on Design Observer, come out squarely against it.

“In short, we believe the proposed choices outlining the future of AIGA are misguided, misinformed and manipulative, and should be regarded skeptically by our fellow members. We want you to know what’s going on with your organization. We urge you to reject this false choice.”

You don’t see much dissension in the graphic design community, so this is conflict of the highest order. Every signatory to this objection is a former AIGA board member, president and/or medalist. The public nature of this dispute between actors who have been historically aligned so closely is unprecedented. Read the full post here.

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Interdisciplinary Interaction Design

Ratings

4 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Yesterday I took the train to Baltimore to moderate a panel with three of that city’s leading digital design practitioners, as part of the local AIGA chapter’s ambitious Design Week. On stage with me were Andy Mangold of Friends of the Web, April Osmanof of Fastspot, and James Pannafino of Millersville University. It was a lot of fun, and I enjoyed meeting the Baltimore chapter immensely.

It was also my first introduction to James, and his book “Interdisciplinary Interaction Design: A Visual Guide.”

Interdisciplinary Interaction Design

The book’s title is more than a mouthful of syllables, but its contents are expertly succinct and useful. It is truly a “visual guide” to the sometimes amorphous concepts that guide work in our profession, from affordances to Fitts’s Law to user errors. Each concept is explained clearly and thoughtfully, with crisp, unfussy illustrations that help root its central idea in real world examples. It’s truly excellent, and highly recommended. Find out more at the book’s site and order it from Amazon.

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Recreating iOS 7 in Microsoft Word

Ratings

1 of 5 stars
What’s this?

The hook of this is “Was iOS 7 created in Microsoft Word?,” which is slightly provocative but not really the point. Rather, this time lapse video actually shows the upgraded operating system’s entire home screen — app icons and all ” being recreated using the infamously tetchy and primitive design tools in Microsoft Word. It’s surprisingly compelling to watch. See it at YouTube.

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Domaine Display

Ratings

4 of 5 stars
What’s this?

The font co-op and marketplace Village recently relaunched its Web site (beautifully designed by Oak). I find that Village is the font source that I return to most consistently — the quality of typefaces there is superb. My current favorite is Domaine Display.

Domaine Display

The Domaine family is from typographer Kris Sowersby. It comes in a full array of weights, but Display is by far the most interesting. More here.

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Night Mode for Mobile

If you’re reading a book late at night on your phone or tablet, being able to set the interface to night mode is essential. Dimming the screen to black and reversing the user interface elements and text out of that background is much easier on the eyes in a darkened room, and easier on relationships, too, if your partner is trying to sleep next to you. I use this all the time in both Kindle and iBooks (the latter, by the way, is my preferred reading app because of the former’s eye-gouging use of justified text — how do people read in that app?!).

But if you’re reading your email, Instapaper, Twitter, your RSS client, or just about anything on your mobile device, there’s no night mode. In fact, outside of these book reader apps, I can’t think of another app that acknowledges the fact that sometimes users open devices in dimly lit environments, and that an interface with a single level of brightness may not apply to every situation.

Continue Reading

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Pierre Omidyar and Glenn Greenwald’s New Journalism Venture

Ratings

2 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Ebay founder Pierre Omidyar has joined forces with Guardian civil liberties/U.S. national security columnist Glenn Greenwald to form a new journalism venture. Jay Rosen talked to Omidyar about this and offers early details, though the shape of the new company and its products is still very much undetermined.

Combined with Jeff Bezos’s purchase of The Washington Post, this seems to indicate that we are in for some innovations in news in the next year or two. It’s also interesting how these events replicate the old pattern of successful entrepreneurs in other industries turning to journalism and media to help cement their legacies.

Read Rosen’s write-up of Omidyar and Greenwald’s venture at his Press Think blog.

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Nielsen Norman Group’s iOS 7 User-Experience Appraisal

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

The venerable usability experts weigh in:

“Is iOS 7 fatally flawed? The short answer is no. Simply because there is no such thing as fatally flawed designs: we can always learn from mistakes. What’s surprising is that we don’t learn from someone else’s mistakes: Apple ignored some of the hurdles that Microsoft experienced with flat design and swipe ambiguity in Windows 8. We still have to see whether Apple’s strong design guidelines will protect most app designers from not getting lost in the flat 2D world. Early experience with applications redesigned for iOS 7 is fairly negative: several have worse usability than their iOS 6 versions.”

Read the full report here.

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How Woody Allen’s Movie Posters Reflect His Films

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

At Film.com, a smart, design-centric analysis of Allen’s work .

“Typography takes a more prominent role, with actor names highlighted more than what you’d find in your typical film poster, while the imagery used is often simple, with a single still photograph highlighting a mood or through a graphic symbol that brand’s a film’s identity. Lavishness is underplayed, with the few visual flourishes mostly being afforded to the film’s title.”

Read the full article at Film.com.

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