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 Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Letterhead Design Contest
Strathmore's Quarterly Letterhead Contest is now accepting entries. The first deadline for 2008 is March 31. Each quarter, the first 25 designers who enter the letterhead contest receive a special gift.   The gift for Q1 2008 entries is an iPod nano. Three quarterly winners will recieve $150 (bronze), $300 (silver) or $500 (gold) and the four gold winners will be eligible for the $1,000 annual grand prize.

Posted by Megan


Call for Entries
1/15/2008 3:06:30 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Hello Illo

Illo is a new quarterly magazine dedicated to illustration. The first issue can be ordered from the Illo website and the second issue is set to debut soon.


via Boing Boing

Posted by Megan


Illustration
1/15/2008 1:10:08 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Sur-Reality

CSA Images just announced a new collection of mod art called Mexlore, which are as weird as they are wonderful.



Posted by Megan


Illustration
1/15/2008 10:25:15 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 14, 2008
Designer Digs

Leave it to Design*Sponge to give as a great sneak peak inside the home of design vets Ellen Lupton and Abbot Miller. The space has a great sense of color and style without sacrificing comfort and livability.

Posted by Megan


Designers
1/14/2008 3:31:44 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Eames Stamps

From the USPS:
"In recognition of their groundbreaking contributions to architecture, furniture design, manufacturing and photographic arts, designers Charles and Ray Eames will be honored this summer with a pane of 16 stamps designed by Derry Noyes of Washington, DC. If you’ve ever sat in a stackable molded chair, you’ve experienced their creativity. Perhaps best known for their furniture, the Eameses were husband and wife as well as design partners. Their extraordinary body of creative work — which reflected the nation’s youthful and inventive outlook after World War II — also included architecture, films and exhibits. Without abandoning tradition, Charles and Ray Eames used new materials and technology to create high-quality products that addressed everyday problems and made modern design available to the American public."

Posted by Megan


Industry News
1/14/2008 10:16:37 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
I (Heart) Austin

I spent a long weekend in Austin, judging (along with three advertising veterans, including a cool guy named Monkey) that town's local Addy awards. And my third trip in about five months confirmed: I've fallen in love with Austin.

A big shout-out and thank-you to all the Addy volunteers who kept us on track with the judging process—not to mention incredibly well-fed: Paul, Lisa, Michael, Courtney, Ally, Travis, Jason, Kara and the gang.

Posted by Bryn

Industry News
1/14/2008 10:03:42 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, January 10, 2008
Overheard On The Forum

No one on the Forum seems particularly impressed with the new Xerox logo. I prefer the logos from 1948 and 1949 that the New York Times shows on a timeline of the logo's transformation over the years. (The new logo looks oddly similar to the green Xbox 360 logo.)

Posted by Megan


Industry News
1/10/2008 1:01:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
Monsters Pop

Yesterday, the USA Today pop-culture blog Pop Candy posted a glowing description of Stefan Bucher's DailyMonster.com and upcoming book 100 Days of Monsters.
"I'm charmed by all of the cute, creepy creatures he has created."

Posted by Megan


HOW Books
1/10/2008 9:17:07 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Design In China

This sounds like an amazing trip: AIGA Center for Cross-Cultural Design (AIGA XCD) together with Package and Design Magazine of China are leading a design expedition deep into the heart of China's flourishing design economy. The two-week event will include visits to great design firms and schools and a tour the Great Wall of China, pluse trips to cities such as Beijing, Tianjing, Xi'an, Guangzhou and Hong Kong. For more information visit xcd.aiga.org.

Posted by Megan


Events
1/10/2008 9:09:27 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Dog In Space

The new Zune Arts Film "Laika" was released last night. Created by 72andSunny and Curious Pictures, the film imagines what might have happened to Laika, the dog launched into space by the Russians fifty years ago. The charming tale incorporates 2D and 3D still photography and textures to create a planet that might as well be doggy heaven.

Posted by Megan


Designers | Just for Fun
1/10/2008 8:37:32 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Wednesday, January 09, 2008
How Did I Miss This

On December 21 (while I was on vacation) John Maeda was named the next president of the Rhode Island School of Design. MIT's loss is certainly RISD's gain.
"I look forward to working with the incredibly inspiring and creative community of RISD to realize the possibilities for the world’s first truly 21st century university of art and design.”


Industry News
1/9/2008 2:51:53 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
HOW Online Exclusive

Great Expectations
by Todd Henry

For some artists, our expectations of ourselves and our work form a subconscious barrier to full, free creativity. In my work with creative pros, I've uncovered three main sources of potentially unhealthy expectations.

Unhealthy Expectation No. 1: Our heroes
Many of us began making art because we were inspired by others to do so. If we're not careful, however, our "hero worship" can become a creative noose. We can easily begin to think that our work is sub-par because it doesn't seem to measure up to the invisible standard we've unknowingly set.

In his incredible book "Free Play," Stephen Nachmanovich writes, "It's great to sit on the shoulders of giants, but don't let the giants sit on YOUR shoulders! There's no room for their legs to dangle."

In other words, we can carry the weight of our heroes on our shoulders and feel the burden to carry their work forward. When we do this, we're denying our own creative skills and passions and trying to live up to someone else's standard. We're also discounting the failures, doubts and missteps that our heroes made on the way to creative success. It's great to strive for brilliance, but it's also important to be patient with our own growth process.

Read more.

Posted by Megan


Creativity | HOW Magazine
1/9/2008 2:40:16 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Growing Up (Literally)

As someone who's:

1) a die-hard foodie
2) increasingly concerned about the quality and environmental impact of my food choices (shopping the local public market every week, avoiding processed foods, cooking from scratch)
3) a gardening geek

... I find The Vertical Farm Project to be incredibly cool. The idea: Because humans are increasingly urban creatures and because we've basically wrecked our existing agricultural land with ecologically poor farming techniques, the answer is to, well, grow up. To give you a sense of the problem:
New York City has a population of approximately 9 million people in all five boroughs, plus the visitor influx. The average per capita annual use of agricultural produce is approximately 711 pounds (12). The combined per capita consumption of the entire population of New York City is nearly 3 million tons, which translates into 266,000 acres of cropland needed solely for growing produce for New York City. The total ecological footprint of food consumption alone for New York City, as a whole, is over 28.8 million acres. This is 1.2% of the total U.S. land area.
The very smart team behind this as-yet theoretical initiative, led by a professor at Columbia University's school of Environmental Health Science, have thought of everything, from wastewater treatment to harnessing the methane produced by agriculture and using as fuel for the enterprise. You can see some very cool designs of what these skyscraper-farms might look like. Here's hoping.



Posted by Bryn

Thought Provoking
1/9/2008 12:57:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, January 08, 2008
Dealing With Deadbeats

Illustrator Tom Richmond offers some great advice about dealing with slow- and no-paying clients that will work for freelance illustrators, designers, writers, etc.
Some people are a little uncomfortable talking about money and payment before any work has been done. I know I would rather get the details of the job and get busy on it needing nothing more than an agreement on total payment, but this is not a smart way to do business… especially with clients you do not know. I get over it by knowing that once the money part is settled the client will get 100% effort on my part on the actual job. Still I want things to be very clear with no room for misinterpretation between myself and the client when it comes to all aspects of the job, including payment. Agree on how long after you invoice them you can expect payment, whether they have an internal contract or purchase order they need in addition to your invoice, etc.


via Drawn

Posted by Megan


Design Resources | Illustration
1/8/2008 10:10:02 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] 
For Boys Only/For Girls Only

The latest HOW book, For Boys Only/For Girls Only is close to my heart. It's actually a reproduction of two sex-ed books from the 1950s that I found in a used book store. Once I started reading, I couldn't stop laughing.

A few gems from For Boys Only:

“I say, doctor, just what is the fun what the older fellows are always beating their gums about—petting, or necking, or boodling? Is it the same as what the older people used to call spooning? How can a fellow who’s as good an athlete and all-around outdoor man as Bill, stand it to stay hanging around with some girl who isn’t interested in a single thing a boy enjoys doing? I just don’t get it.”

Question: Doesn’t a shot of liquor increase a fellow’s ability to be—er,—manly?
Answer: Not in the slightest. What it does do is simply to make him think he’s more of a man than he actually is! Even a little drink makes a fellow’s opinion of himself go up, while it strengthens his desires. At the same time it blunts the good sense and self-restraint that might otherwise have kept him from doing harm to a girl he’s supposed to be reliable enough to be with. And its avoidance might well prevent him form getting a disease, or from becoming a father of an illegitimate child. You can imagine what a tragedy either of these must be!

This internal secretion put out by the testicles changes you in some mysterious way that no one really understands, so that you begin to feel the way a man feels and have some of the thoughts and wishes that a man has and that a younger boy doesn’t have. For example, you begin to have courage and backbone and guts, that are not expected of a small boy but are taken for granted in a man. You get more and more interested in girls, where before as a little fellow you thought they were just a nuisance to be teased and then pushed aside. You look forward to having more to do with them—first with any girl, later with one particular one.

A few gems from For Girls Only:

“I wonder why she never married,” added Jane. “You know she’s old. She’s twenty-four! I’m sure she must have had several love affairs. I bet she was engaged to be married, and he was killed in the war. I certainly expect to get married before I’m that old! I’m going to have eight children, and live in a great big house.”

“And what do you call ‘fun’? Having a boy hold your hand and kiss you? My mother said it was wicked to allow a boy even to touch you. She told me about Edna who had to leave school because she let a boy touch her.”
    “What about Edna? I knew she had to leave school; but what was it all about?”
    “Why, didn’t you know she was going to have a baby?”
    In utter amazement both girls almost shrieked, “NO!”
    “Tell us about it. I didn’t know you could have a baby if you weren’t married,” said Jane. “What an awful thing! I knew that everything was ‘hush, hush’ about Edna; but I never dreamed such a thing could happen at high school. Rosemary ran off and got married. But Edna! she seemed so nice! I can’t believe it; and I can’t understand it, either.”

“Now let me tell you something, Helen. I, too, hope the boys will think you are pretty. I hope you will always want to be well dressed, and never look like a sloppy Joe when you are at a formal reception; that is a most important thing in a girl’s life. But when you’re older and get married, if you still keep on thinking that your dress and the shade of lipstick are the biggest things in your life, that to have a baby might spoil your figure, then you have not grown up emotionally. We could all name some women who are just like that; and I’m afraid they don’t make their husbands very happy.

Posted by Megan


HOW Books
1/8/2008 8:53:28 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Monday, January 07, 2008
Type On The Web

I Love Typography has just posted a follow up to the popular 15 Excellent Examples of Web Typography called, appropriately enough, 15 Great Examples of Web Typography. ILT promises to make this a quarterly feature. Yay!

Posted by Megan


Typography
1/7/2008 2:07:01 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
Ahead of the Curve

We get regular updates from the very smart people at Trendwatching.com (founder Reiner Evers was interviewed in HOW's recent Future of Design issue). Today's newsletter caught our eye -- it links to a webpage where Trendwatching has archived a whole host of trend articles from around the globe. If you're looking for perspective from Taiwan or India, here's where to go for a peek at design and consumer trends.

Posted by Bryn

Industry News
1/7/2008 1:37:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
News & Notes

Here's what we're hearing from companies in the design industry:

SMART Papers now offers large-format products in its Kromekote, Knightkote, Carnival and Pegasus brands. The papers are available from 19 inches x 13 inches up to 22.5 inches x 14.33 inches, and are geared toward projects printed on digital presses. SMART also recently updated its uncoated text, writing and cover Carnival line; a new swatchbook is available.

• Middletown, CT-based Bertz Design garnered recognition from Mohawk with the mill's Mohawk Windpower Partnership Award. The firm created an annual report for Constellation Brands printed on Mohawk Via 100% PC Cool White; according to Mohawk, that choice saved 518 trees and 10 barrels of crude oil, and prevented more than 47,000 pounds of greenhouse gases and more than 24,000 pounds of air pollution. Bertz picked up a similar award for its annual report for Darwin Professional Underwriters, which was printed on Mohawk Options 100% PC White.

O'Reilly has released "Photoshop CS3 RAW," a guide for designers and photographers who work with the RAW image format.

Microtek launched its new ArtixScan M1, a combo flatbed and film scanner.

Neenah Paper is sponsoring a contest for best overall use of its paper; two winners will receive an all-expense-paid trip to the 2008 HOW Design Conference, May 18-21 in Boston.

Altemus announced the first addition to its font collection in six years: a series of 12 decorative and dingbat fonts that, in total, contain nearly 10,000 designs.

Posted by Bryn

Industry News
1/7/2008 10:31:31 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, January 04, 2008
The Look Book Wins

The Look Book
by Chris Sickels of Red Nose Studio just won a Society of Illustrators award. It will be published in the 50th award annual and will be exhibited in the Sequential exhibit in the Society gallery in New York in the spring.

Posted by Megan


HOW Books
1/4/2008 10:26:47 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Handwriting On The Screen

I love movies, so I saw several during my Christmas vacation. My favorite, by far, was Juno. It was sweet and heartwarming, but not icky or overdone. And one of the coolest things about it was the opening titles designed by Shadowplay Studio.





Posted by Megan


Illustration | Typography
1/4/2008 9:07:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]