Khoi Vinh's Blog, page 126

November 26, 2013

Fracture Feed Sponsorship

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Sponsorship by The Syndicate. Sponsor Subtraction.com today.



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Published on November 26, 2013 21:00

November 22, 2013

Designing News by Francesco Franchi

This new book written and gorgeously designed by my friend Francesco Franchi is an awesome argument for print and editorial design and the continued existing of beautifully produced books — basically a superb refutation of many of the things I’ve found myself arguing against (even though I don’t really mean to) on this blog.



Designing News



You can read more about it at Gestalten or order your copy at Amazon.


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Published on November 22, 2013 17:39

November 21, 2013

Feature Development for Social Networking

Hugo Award-nominated author Ben Rosenbaum spins this tale of a zombie apocalypse, told through Facebook postings within a circle of friends dealing with an infection and internal Facebook company emails debating on adding a feature to identify friends as zombies. It’s hilarious but incredibly specific to the worlds of using and building social networks. What’s also interesting, to me, is how the writing emulates the interfaces of status updates and user emails, almost replicating them — user interfaces as fiction. Read the short story here; you probably won’t be able to stop scrolling.


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Published on November 21, 2013 17:07

November 19, 2013

Voila Feed Sponsorship

Voila

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Sponsorship by The Syndicate. Sponsor Subtraction.com today.



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Published on November 19, 2013 21:00

November 18, 2013

Mad Magazine Number 21

John Hilgart’s 4CP blog takes a detailed look at this amazing cover from the original Mad Magazine.



“Disguised to look like an interior page full of novelty ads, it is so dense with tiny print as to be almost illegible at original printed size. Business matters are handled in two small boxes at the top (with a delightful splash of color), while forty-six novelty ads cover the rest of the space. It is so true to the originals that it parodies that it’s almost indistinguishable from them from more than a foot away.”




We are accustomed to satirical graphic design these days, but I imagine this issue must have confused lots of stockists if not readers.



Mad Magazine No. 21



Hilgart has details of all forty-six ersatz ads in his blog post. I’ve actually written about Hilgart’s vintage comics blogs many times on this blog, and I’ll probably continue to do so as long as he blogs because I’m such a big fan. Even better, he’s just started a version of 4CP on Tumblr.


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Published on November 18, 2013 13:32

November 15, 2013

MUBI’s Movie Poster of the Week

For four-plus years, Adrian Curry has been turning in a regular column at MUBI Notebook called “.” The name is a bit of a misnomer, because every entry features at least a half dozen fascinating specimens of posters past and present; it’s as compelling a survey of the intersection of cinema and graphic design as any out there.



Vivre sa vie



Pierrot le Fou



The Earrings of Madame De…



Love in the Afternoon



Grand Prix



If weekly strikes you as insufficient, Curry also maintains a Tumblr called Movie Poster of the Day, which as the name suggests presents a single poster once a day. It’s great too, but the writing at MUBI is a reward in itself, so visit Movie Poster of the Week first. Oh, also, MUBI is phenomenal.


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Published on November 15, 2013 16:47

November 14, 2013

U-Haul Super Graphics

Two decades ago, U-Haul moving vans and trailers started sporting surprisingly engaging illustrations on their sides. Granted, they weren’t high art, but they were tasteful, at least, and they were a commendably restrained use of what amounts to thousands of highly mobile, highly visible billboard spaces. According to the company:



“The space each graphic occupies on our trucks is priceless. It’s not for sale. We could sell this space to corporate America, but U-Haul believes we must give something back to the communities we serve…Over 250 different images have been created since the Super Graphics program began, each one honoring individual states and provinces, and saluting North America’s public.”




Now someone clever over at U-Haul has finally compiled all the graphics into one place on U-Haul’s Web site. Go spot the ones you know well, and/or the ones from your home state.


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Published on November 14, 2013 18:56

November 13, 2013

Lootback Feed Sponsorship

Lootback

Your client deadline is in the morning and you really need some web design resources to finish out the project. A dollar here and a dollar there, often stock items add up quickly.



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It’s a pretty unique idea that I’ve never seen before. Lootback will save you time and money, so be sure to give it a try.



Sponsorship by The Syndicate.



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Published on November 13, 2013 21:00

Neue Grafik Reprinted

For graphic designers, this is a big deal:



“The ‘International Review of graphic design and related subjects,’ was initiated by designer Josef Müller-Brockmann and published in eighteen issues between 1958 and 1965 by an editorial collective consisting of him, Richard Paul Lohse, Hans Neuburg und Carlo Vivarelli. The complete volumes are now available in an excellent facsimile reprint from Lars Müller Publishers.”




The reprints come case-bound, obviously intended to be displayed prominently on your bookshelf so that visitors can see how hardcore Modernist you are.



Neue Grafik



Now, in the past I’ve been guilty of a certain, design-centric flavor of conspicuous consumption-oriented blogging in which an artifact of mid-Century Modernism like this one is presented along with a declaration of purchasing intent. The tone is usually flagrantly concise, as in “Must have!,” or “Sold!” or, “Just bought it,” as if to imply that the object is so essential, so unimpeachably critical to the worldview of any designer that it simply must be owned, and if you didn’t know that already, you’re not a real designer.



But this reprint goes for US$300, and to be frank, most of these things are incredibly boring, not particularly relevant any longer, and highly overrated. Don’t get me wrong; I’d be very keen to get my hands on one of these sets to peruse it, and maybe spend a few hours reading through its pages. But after indulging in many of these sorts of things over the years, I feel now that I understand that they are really more about showing off than studying up.



Don’t let that stop you from buying a set, though, if you are so inclined. Read more here.


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Published on November 13, 2013 19:30

“Castello Cavalcanti” by Wes Anderson

This new, seven-minute short film from director Wes Anderson is “presented by Prada” and is an homage to the work of Federico Fellini. Imagine the set of a Fellini film as a backdrop for Andersonisms, and you get the idea.



By the way, I find it fascinating how ostensibly indie directors are free to make obviously commercial contract work like this with no loss to their credibility. Imagine Lorde, say, writing a song “presented by Prada.” We hold different kinds of artists accountable to different kinds of standards, apparently without a unifying logic.



Watch “Castello Cavalcanti” at YouTube.


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Published on November 13, 2013 18:45

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