Tag: graphic design

  • Beautifully Briefed 23.1: Winter Potpourri

    Beautifully Briefed 23.1: Winter Potpourri

    From book design and minimalist photography to … well, book design and what absolutely isn’t minimalist photography, plus some street signs and another warning about Adobe. Let’s dig in.

    Book Design #1: People Really Do Judge a Book by its Cover

    From University College Cork — that’s Ireland, folks — we have something that, on the surface, seems obvious: a book cover “is the most likely factor to convince a person to read a book if they are unfamiliar with the work or its author.” Maria Butler, a PhD candidate in the School of English and Digital Humanities at UCC, reminds us why.

    Design by Kimberly Glyder.

    You’re reading Foreword, so you likely agree — and shown above is one of those worth-a-thousand-words images: the first of the 2023 titles I’ve set aside for my favorites of the year, and absolutely something good enough to make me pluck it off the shelf without knowing anything about either the title or author.

    Bonus: See 70 (!) more of my Favorite Book Covers of 2022.

    Book Design #2: Shift Happens

    A fantastic website has clicked our way: Shift Happens, for a book about keyboards.

    A screenshot from the Shift Happens website. Great stuff.

    This project not only scores with great web design — check the interactive version of the book, pictured above — but what also seems like great book design. It’s a Kickstarter project (or will be, next month), so the usual cautions apply, but I might just go ahead and take the leap.

    Couple of interesting book design items, by the way: the TOC is at the back, the endpapers are awesome, and the macro photography is tops. The book design reminds me of The Playmakers, still my favorite book design project ever.

    Bonus: Tim Walsh, author of The Playmakers, is still going strong. Nice.

    Photography #1: Minimalism

    The winners of the Minimalist Photography of 2022 awards are in, some are fantastic. Here are a couple of favorites, from the architecture category:

    “Prince Claus Bridge in the Netherlands,” by Arthur van Orden
    “Blue Window,” by Andrea Richey

    The Minimalist Photography Award is the only foundation that deals extensively and professionally with minimalist photography as a branch of photography in which the photographic artistic vision takes the lead.

    Milad Safabakhsh, President of Minimalist Photography Awards
    Photography #2: Wonders of Street View

    This is Colossal brings us another gem from Neal.Fun: the Wonders of Street View.

    “Wall Driver,” indeed.

    Direct quote, just because: “A man with three legs, a vintage car scaling a building, and an unsettling formation of people donning bird masks are a few of the scenarios highlighted in the terrifically bizarre Wonders of Street View.”

    I didn’t know it was a thing to dress up and pose for the Google cameras. Perfect.

    Street Sign Style Guide

    Speaking of street views, did you know there’s a style guide for highway signs? Would you believe that I’m a fan?

    Interestingly, there is an I-42/I-17 interchange in Phoenix, but this ain’t it: these signs are representational.

    As with most things government, there’s confusion, too many regulations, and yet it’s based around good ideas. Beautiful Public Data has a guide to the guide.

    Adobe Steps in it, Again

    From DPReview: “If you’re an Adobe Creative Cloud subscriber, you might want to go and turn off a new setting immediately. It’s been discovered that Adobe has automatically opted users into a ‘Content analysis’ program that allows Adobe to analyze your media files […] for use in its machine learning training programs.”

    It’s important to note that Adobe only uses the files saved in the “Creative Cloud,” something I don’t do as a matter of course, but even still, this is yet another example of Adobe using its monopoly position in the creative field to take advantage of its paying customers.

    Adobe, unsurprisingly, didn’t return DPReview’s request for a comment/clarification.

  • Climate: Little Books, Big Ideas, Great Design

    Climate: Little Books, Big Ideas, Great Design

    Penguin has introduced — and reissued — a number of small titles regarding climate change, and done so with some great design:

    Green (Mountains)
    Palm (Island)
    Is (Happening)

    They’re even available as a boxed set:

    Green Ideas (Set)

    More at Penguin (UK). Via It’s Nice That, which has a nice writeup — check it out.

  • Peace, Ken Garland

    Peace, Ken Garland

    All of us recognize this symbol:

    Peace!

    Now, let’s take a moment to celebrate the creator: Ken Garland. Not your typical graphic designer, he reached out, embraced the 1960’s and ’70s, and never looked back.

    I couldn’t remember where I’d heard his name until I realized he was in toy and game design, and likely mentioned in one of the toy books I’ve worked on over the years. But there’s so much more. Read more of his life story at Dezeen (“Graphic designer Ken Garland dies aged 92“) and It’s Nice That (“Adrian Shaughnessy on Ken Garland, a ‘disruptive and questioning spirit‘”).

  • A History of Arab Graphic Design

    A History of Arab Graphic Design

    A History of Arab Graphic Design is easily the best introduction to the history of modern Arab visual culture on the market today. It lacks the jargon of exhibition catalogues, leans heavily on visual sources, and dismisses some previously held assumptions about Arab art[.]

    Something for those of us in the West who sometimes suffer from Western-centricity. More at the Brooklyn Rail.

  • It’s Nice That: A lesson in experimental and original book design

    It’s Nice That: A lesson in experimental and original book design

    It goes without saying that one of the many reasons book design is so popular amongst designers is due to its versatility. It’s a specialty that the graphic designer Ana Resende knows well, having executed a myriad of book design projects ranging from books on film, architecture, design and art.

    Enjoy this soon. Excellent.