20th
September
2002
“It’s time the great advertising lines earned some recognition. Slogans, straplines, taglines, end lines, payoffs, claims and signatures — even some headlines. The Advertising Slogan Hall Of Fame, sponsored by ADSlogans Unlimited, recognizes excellence and best practice in advertising, benchmarking creativity — identifying the best in branding.”
posted in Branding | Permalink |
20th
September
2002
“Virginia Postrel, the author of The Future and Its Enemies, writes the Economic Scene column for The New York Times business section every fourth Thursday. Her new book, The Age of Look and Feel will be published by HarperCollins in June 2003. In the book, she explores the economic, cultural, social, personal and political implications of the growing importance of aesthetics in business and society.”
posted in Industrial design | Permalink |
20th
September
2002
“Enhanced Thumbnails is a proprietary visualization technique that makes it easier to find relevant content quickly within documents and document collections… [A] study showed that people using Enhanced Thumbnails found the answers to their queries 29% faster than when they used text summaries, and 22% faster than when they used plain thumbnails.”
posted in Searching | Permalink |
20th
September
2002
The Smaller Picture “The network is the brain. Smaller Picture is a truly collaborative experiment where users participate in the real-time growth of a bitmap alphabet. The system, developed by UK programmer Kevan Davis with inputs from Typophile’s Jared Benson, presents a 2
posted in Typography | Permalink |
20th
September
2002
“According to the well-known classification system (adapted from the Association Typographique Internationale (ATypI) following typefaces are distinguished…”
posted in Typography | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“Piet Mondrian should feel flattered: people can tell the real thing from a slightly altered version — just. Chris McManus, a psychologist at University College London, took studies by the giant of post impressionism, altered the balance of composition a little with a computer, and tested them on the public.”
posted in Art | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“The manager at the Chanel boutique on Madison Avenue, when asked for handbags with logos on them, glanced around the shop — for the first time in decades almost bare of big initials — and opened a floor-to-ceiling mirrored cabinet. There, hidden from the customers who did not ask for them, were rows of purses emblazoned with CCs at least six inches tall.”
posted in Branding | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“Pantone owns the monopoly on every tint, tone, and shade you’ve ever seen. Now it wants to control the colors you’ll see in the future… Though Pantone doesn’t sell inks, dyes, or paints, it has come to hold a monopoly on color. Of course, frequencies of light, like naturally occurring sounds, are free for anyone to use. But Pantone owns their names — or, more specifically, their designated numbers and spectro-photometric descriptions.”
posted in Color | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“Colour is something we take for granted, it’s all around us. Using colour effectively to enhance communications is not quite so simple. Most people understand about warm colours and cool colours but the important thing about colours, is that they are seldom seen in isolation, they are seen in the context of other colours around them and that affects them all.”
posted in Color | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“For the first time in animation history, the public will now be able to watch an entire animated feature, HAIR HIGH, being drawn before their eyes, live on the internet. Tune in between 10am and 6pm EST to see Bill at work!”
posted in Comics | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“Colour is something we take for granted, it+s all around us. Using colour effectively to enhance communications is not quite so simple. Most people understand about warm colours and cool colours but the important thing about colours, is that they are seldom seen in isolation, they are seen in the context of other colours around them and that affects them all.”
posted in Graphic design | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
Warning: This link will resize your browser window. “For an experiment a number of people were asked to draw a jug on a piece of paper. All the pieces of paper were of the same size and shape. After the drawings had been collected the same people were asked to draw the same jug again, with the sheet of paper turned by 90 degrees.”
posted in Graphic design | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
It’s all in Spanish, but the great newspaper El Mundo has posted all their interactive graphics from their news stories.
posted in Information graphics | Permalink |
17th
September
2002
“An independent directory of typefaces organized into categories: The Fontscape font directory is designed to help you find the ideal typeface for your application, whether it’s a publishing project, graphic design, logo, or simply a font for your document. It includes fonts from over a hundred publishers, including Adobe, Agfa-Monotype, Berthold, Bitstream, Elsner+Flake, FontFont, ITC, Letraset, Linotype, P22, URW++, and many smaller foundries.”
posted in Typography | Permalink |