• Graphic Design

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    08.Oct

    This is Aaron Draplin telling a story about a sign. He’s a graphic designer and very passionate about what he does. This clip is an extra from a mini documentary called ‘America is F*cked’. Strong language- mostly lots of F words.
    If you like what you saw here, checkout Aaron Draplin’s site.

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    29.Sep

    Every once and a while I see a poster that I really like. If you can’t guess already, I really like this one. It’s simple and to the point, not to mention slick and very graphic. It is a  silkscreened edition printed on ‘Plike Black’ 140 GSM paper from GF Smith.
    You can purchase your very [...]

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    26.Jul

    Many people are completely content with the desktop wallpapers that come pre-installed on their computer. You know the type… those people who still have the classic Apple close up of the leopard print fur photo. But for people (like me) who spend most of their time awake in front of a computer, picking out a [...]

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  • Art World

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    08.Aug

    Another art show in the Hamptons?!?!?! Who would have thought! This Saturday from 5-10pm @ 307 Butter Lane in Bridgehampton the boys from Edgewood Goodies, Create Build Destroy, and Don Clothing are putting on a kick ass show titled: Mind or Material - The Journey from Inspiration to Fruition.
    PJ Monte, Jake Patterson, and Alex [...]

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    29.Jul

    If you are near Southampton this weekend you should defintely come down to the Parrish Art Museum for Project Sandstorm! Project Sandstorm is a one night art performance and sand installation inspired by the current exhibition on view at the Parrish Sand: Memory, Meaning, and Metaphor. Created by over forty artists from Long Island art [...]

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    22.Jul

    If you didn’t make it to the 711 Gallery opening, then you need to stop slacking. The gallery is three floors, has a winding staircase, skylights, and 20 foot (maybe more, I forgot to measure) ceilings. The openings may be crowded and sweaty, but it’s okay, there are plenty of beautiful art pieces, hot girls, [...]

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  • Fashion

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    01.Jun

    Apparently the Clinton campaign heard about all the great press Obama has been getting for his campaign’s well designed swag and they want in. Hillary Clinton’s website has added a new threadless-esque feature encouraging visitors to post their own t-shirt designs. The five best rated t-shirts will be printed and sold via the Clinton Campaign [...]

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    28.May

    Every girl on the planet day dreams about being cat woman for one day.
    Every girl on the planet covets Christian Louboutins.
    Now with the collaboration of Christian Louboutins and Rodarte, your day dream got one step closer to coming true.

    Christian Louboutins has joined forces with designers such as Chloe, Lanvin, McQueen and YSL and this seasons [...]

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    12.May

    For the past couples seasons, High Fashion designers have explored the modern mens fashion by designing sneakers. This year Alber Elbaz of Lanvin, the nearly century old french fashion house, came with a collection of silk, suede, mesh and metallic patent leather high-tops (pictured above).
    Of course when you say think high fashion the price tag [...]

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  • Film / Video

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    29.Sep

    ‘Sticker cars’ is a phrase you may not be too familiar with, but if you live in New Orleans it’s very possible you do. It’s a new breed of “customization” that’s hitting the car scene hard down south. You make the car “your own” by getting it vinyl wrapped, or, stickered.
    I personally don’t see how [...]

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    30.Jul

    ‘Martin the Tailor’ is a story about Martin Greenfield, a tailor. He began working with clothes in a concentration camp in Germany, and ended up in the USA years later as the owner of a very successful garment factory.
    The video is beautifully shot by Ed David and directed by Galen Summer. The dialog, the music, [...]

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    24.Jul

    Musician Feist is far from just a musician, she’s an artist. Probably her most famous song, 1234, has a great music video that was filmed in all one shot (watch 1,2,3,4 here).
    She recently performed 1,2,3,4 with some of your very favorite fuzzy creatures on Sesame Street, but with a slight twist. Feist switched the [...]

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  • Technology

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    29.Sep

    Since Flickr has a public API, people can create all sorts of fun applications to go play with the extensive photo website. The Multicolr Search Lab by Idée Inc lets you search the entire Flickr library by color. You can pick up to 10 colors. Above I did a search using primary colors: red, yellow, [...]

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    30.Jul

    I ran across Kiosk’s website tonight and was amazed with what I found. It may be old news to some, but it’s new to me so I’m going to share it.
    The idea behind the website is so simple, and yet so perfect. They travel across the world and find products that make you “why don’t [...]

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    26.Jul

    Lab[au], a design firm based out of Belgium, has installed windows with advanced lighting technology in a building in Brussels. Every night there are light shows at the Dexia Towers, where 4,200 of the 6,000 windows on the building are lit up with the help of 150,000 leds.
    CR Blog explains how the lighting techology [...]

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  • In the News

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    08.Oct

    Artist Laura Gilbert was featured today on CNN for her stunt “The Zero Dollar.” Laura passed out 10,000 fake “zero dollars” at the New York Stock Exchange to passerby’s. Who knows, maybe those bills will be worth something one day, being that they were signed by Laura.
    Laura stated that the zero dollar project was [...]

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    20.Jul

    Most people won’t make the effort to bend over and pickup a penny from the street. Chevrolet tested this idea by creating placing a 20 foot billboard in London and covering it with over 20,000 pennies. The pennies were all plucked from the billboard in less than 30 minutes.
    Chevrolet’s Les Turton said: “There have been some [...]

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    03.Jun

    You’re probably wondering why I chose to write about the inventor of the Pringles can dying, and not Yves Saint Laurent’s death. Well, it’s obviously because this is much more interesting.

    Anyways. Fredric J. Baur, of Cincinnati, died at age 89. Apparently he was so proud of his invention that a portion of his ashes was [...]

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Extreme Type Terminology

Paul Dean of www.ilovetypography.com has written an extremely extensive article on typography. Don’t waste your parent’s hard earned cash on a boring type class, when you can get all of that knowledge and more for free!
Below is an excerpt:
Our modern English alphabet is a child of the Latin alphabet or Roman alphabet, which evolved from [...]

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By Greg Passuntino

Graphic designer, web designer, and native New Yorker. Grew up in downtown NYC and currently resides in Chinatown. He eats dollar dumplings at least once a day.

Paul Dean of www.ilovetypography.com has written an extremely extensive article on typography. Don’t waste your parent’s hard earned cash on a boring type class, when you can get all of that knowledge and more for free!

Below is an excerpt:

Our modern English alphabet is a child of the Latin alphabet or Roman alphabet, which evolved from a western version of the Greek alphabet approximately 2,700 years ago. The profession of typography was essentially born in Germany with Johannes Gutenberg’s invention of a movable metal type printing press in the early 1450s. The individual pieces of metal type that Gutenberg worked with were not letters, but letterforms.

Let me explain. There is a subtle but important difference in meaning between a grapheme, character or letter and a glyph, letterform or sort. A letter, character or grapheme refers to a fundamental conceptual mark that represents a spoken sound. (A phoneme refers directly to the sound.) A sort, letterform or glyph refers to a particular manifestation of a letter or character, one created by a type designer.

The first typefaces were based on the manuscript handwriting of the time, and were intended to be indistinguishable from it. Typefounders, designers and producers of metal type, have subsequently reached to the Roman lettering of antiquity for inspiration, and now, in an era of digital typography, inspiration and references come from sources that were unimaginable in the past.

Since the invention of printing, typefaces have been classified historically. The earliest type is now known as black letter, blackletter, block, fraktur, gothic or old English. The humanist, or Venetian typefaces followed, a style that more closely resembled handwriting. Old style, old face, or garalde type. Garalde, a term rarely used now, is a mash-up of the names Garamond and Aldus, referring to the notable typefounders Claude Garamond and Aldus Manutius. Old style typefaces are distinguishable from humanist types by the horizontal rather than oblique or sloping crossbar of the lowercase e.

Read the full article at www.ilovetypography.com


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