While watching a recent documentary about Yves Saint Laurent, his partner had a comment on deadlines. Something to the effect: I don't know what magic designers have but they always make the deadline.
Eight years in newspapers honed my deadline muscles and muses. But I wanted relief, so I turned to academia for—among other things—it's openness. But deadlines are part of design always and this month was an extraordinary one.
So just a note of gratitude to Pierre Bergé for not only acknowledging the power of a deadline, but for making me feel better when I needed it. Four major publications have returned from the press in the past week alone. I feel the weight of the world off my shoulders.
Maybe that's the magic. Design generates constant relief. Constant labor. Constant ticking. Constant joy.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Trifecta of Cool
Ok, it's actually a foursome of cool but quadrangle isn't a very cool word.
Heath Ceramics + Eames + House Industries + French Paper Co. = a reason to remodel the exterior of my house. Visit here for loveliness.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Infinite City
Infinite City is one of those books it's practically impossible to write about, because it is too eloquent to be summarized. As Rebecca Solnit's title suggests, it simply cannot be contained. So accept these meager photographs as valentines to what has been the most enchanting read I've had in years. The most conceptually-pristine project of recent memory. The perfect integration of three passions of mine: writing, design and cartography. Each map in this atlas is juxtaposed in a manner that evokes more than their literal meanings.
Loveliest flourish of the whole book: not placing a period at the end of the essays. Rather, each essay ends with the glyph for infinity ∞
Labels:
books,
cartography,
infographic,
maps,
treasures,
typography,
valentines,
watermark,
West
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Forgotten Dreams
Werner Herzog's new documentary, Cave of Forgotten Dreams, is mesmerizing. Cave paintings are the original watermark ... the oldest traceable record of man. This film takes us inside the Chauvet caves of Southern France to witness 30,000 year old cave paintings. I have only been in two caves in my lifetime. Caves have that way of dwarfing mankind; diminishing how I feel about my place in the universe. The patience of stalagmites and the pristine way caves preserve their caches really make me second-guess the Rocky Mountains I see every day of my life. We have no way of knowing how many mysteries are unaccessible to us. So it's fortunate when discoveries like this are made. I understand the primitive impulse of marking, but seeing the hand prints of ancient man in such a fresh way only provokes questions upon questions for me. And absolute respect for humans; for our creative spirit; for our brief time on Earth and for our unifying desire to leave something behind.
Labels:
cave paintings,
creativity,
movies,
mural,
painting,
reveries,
travel,
watermark
Monday, May 16, 2011
Foiled Again
Sometimes I feel like a squirrel with my constant attraction to shiny things. To justify recent impulses, I offer descriptions from a Pantone webinar of how metals are being used now:
• as ephemeral colors with broken shines.
• as material illusions with textured monochromes.
• in ways that are familiar, but new.
Take for example a palette they call Titanium: a bridge to new heights.
Where blues break and mutate, then turn to black. Bursts of overexposed colors create tonal variation. It’s a complete statement in metal with both reflective and matte surfaces.
These two invitations came off the press this past week. Evening Under the Stars is printed on Reich Shine's Onyx. To enhance it's astral qualities, and to make it seem more blue, I specified a pale foil and matching juniper-colored envelopes from CTI's Aspire Petallics. But the colors are fleeting and drift from a variation on the standard black and white event; to a turquoise-infused galaxy hovering over fountains and night-blooming flowers—a complete landscape in indigo, beryl, verdigris and aquamarine.
The Polo Cup invitation for the University of Utah called for foil to add flair to Pat Bagley's signature jockey drawing. In its third year of use, we needed to make it familiar, but new. We embossed the entire illustration contour and foil stamped the line art. I think the foil is honorific of his handiwork. It glints like like pencil lead and like a trophy. Attendees will recall the previous year's flamboyance and whole-charactered cast.
Labels:
analysis,
blue,
CTI,
foil,
fundraising,
illustration,
pantone,
paper,
Pat Bagley,
portfolio,
printing,
Reich,
silver
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Inked Letters
This lovely fragment from a full alphabet in ink and water was created by Ruslan Khasanov. I haven't been able to get it out of my mind all week. It's dreamy, ephemeral, and exquisite.
iGutenberg
This charming infographic spans two and one-half millennia of printing. From China's wood type to Germany's Gutenberg Bible to the good old American iPad. I've had my iPad less than a month and am still in the honeymoon phase. It's the perfect format for magazines, and magazine reading. I love the seamless nature of leaving an article to visit a Web site and promptly returning. I love the layout options and dynamic content expressions without the commotion of Web publishing. It's another example of every day magic.
The graphic is produced by Visual Loop and designed by Flávia Marinho.
The graphic is produced by Visual Loop and designed by Flávia Marinho.
Labels:
infographic,
magazines,
maps,
printing
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






