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Books

A pretty big catch-all category for all things bookish.

XPLANE reprints Robert Horn’s classic book, “Visual Language”

This week, the newly formed XPLANE Press achieved its first milestone: The reprinting of Bob Horn’s classic book Visual Language. Horn’s book makes the case that visual language is truly an emerging international language, and — like all languages — it has an inherent order, syntax, and grammar that can be learned and applied. While the world of information design has come a long way in the 10 years since Visual Language was first published, the book’s core message remains relevant today.

Visual Language has been out of print for the last few years, but is now back on the market via the XPLANE store. We will soon be offering it on Amazon as well, where used copies have been selling for upwards of $100. Here’s more from XPLANE founder Dave Gray.

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 at 3:26 pm
Also published in Communications, Language, Visual thinking, XPLANE news | Comments Off



Graphis Diagrams

“To my mind Graphis Diagrams has to be one of the seminal publications on diagrams. Less acedemic than Tufte, this book showcases a wealth of styles from the crazy to the intensely Swiss. Here are some of my favourite parts.” (Thanks Noah Brier!)

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, July 5th, 2007 at 11:59 pm
Also published in Infodesign & graphics | Comments Off



Killed Cartoons: Casualties from the War on Free Expression

The Bookslut review: “Norman Rockwell’s best painting may very well be Blood Brothers, a grim depiction of two dead soldiers, one white and one black, laid out beside each other with their blood intermixing on a Vietnamese battlefield. The white soldier’s eyes are closed, but the black one’s are wide open in a perpetual expression of shock. Unfortunately, it was killed by Look magazine in 1968.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, June 11th, 2007 at 6:38 pm
Also published in Comics, Politics | Comments Off



Keaggy @ Coudal

Coudal croisHey! I’m going to be the Guest Editor for the month of June over at coudal.com.

My new book, “Milk Eggs Vodka: Grocery Lists Lost and Found,” just came out (more info here) and Jim Coudal was gracious enough to write the foreword of the book — I figured he’d perfect considering he’s the founder of the wonderful MoOM. And Coudaler Susan Everett contributed a great stack of lists.

So, once again, a big thank you to the Coudal crew! I’m looking forward to a month of good linking.

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, June 1st, 2007 at 10:50 am
Also published in Random, XPLANE news | Comments Off



Announcing “Milk Eggs Vodka: Grocery Lists Lost & Found”

Milk Eggs VodkaWe now interrupt this normally useful weblog with a blatant self-link from xBlog editor Bill Keaggy: Today my book is released. It’s based on one of my web sites, grocerylists.org, and is published by HOW Books (publishers of Print and HOW magazines and a wonderful variety of design books).

“Milk Eggs Vodka: Grocery Lists Lost & Found” features nearly 300 discarded grocery lists from all over the U.S. — and a few from around the globe. The foreword is written by Jim Coudal, of Coudal Partners and Museum of Online Museums fame. Sorted into surprisingly obvious chapters (lists with poor spelling, healthy vs. unhealthy lists, lists made by elderly people or people planning parties, lists with drawings, doodles and notes on them, etc.), each list is displayed, dissected and commented on. You’ll probably never leave your list in the grocery cart again.

Where else will you find a 2,000-year-old grocery list, lists from all 50 U.S. states, the most commonly misspelled words on Americans’ shopping lists, delicious recipes made using only ingredients listed on other people’s discarded lists, a shoplifting list and a chance meeting with Chevy Chase in the bathroom at Yankee Stadium? Where? (Probably nowhere.)

But why collect found grocery lists? Because lists tell us a lot about our neighbors, our friends, our ancestors, our species and ourselves. They’re supposed to be private and that’s why it’s so enjoyable to look through the ones that people discard — unless one of those lists happens to be yours. Then it might not be so enjoyable, because if there’s one thing I like more than finding a lost grocery list — it’s making fun of it.

Order MEV from Amazon U.S.
Order MEV from Amazon Canada
Order MEV from Amazon U.K.
Order MEV from Amazon Japan
Order MEV from Barnes & Noble
Order MEV from Powell’s Books

I also made a promo site at milkeggsvodka.com (with a new blog here to document the weird journey of releasing and promoting the book). This was an extremely fun project to work on — and I think you’ll find it pretty fun to read as well. If you like food, freaks and/or Found Magazine, you’ll dig this.

—Bill Keaggy

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007 at 8:18 am
Also published in Random | Comments Off



Todd Warfel’s Prototyping Book

“Rosenfeld Media is proud to announce that Todd Zaki Warfel has begun work on a book on developing prototypes. ‘A Practitioner’s Guide to Prototyping’ will help you quickly flesh out your design ideas, test your assumptions, and gather real-time feedback from users. The book will discuss how prototypes are more than just a design tool, demonstrating how they can help you market a product, gain internal buy-in, and test feasibility with your development team.” (Thanks Airbag!)

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, March 19th, 2007 at 8:17 am
Also published in Product design, Software & technology, Web design & dev | Comments Off



When Cory Doctorow Ruled the World

“Interviewing Cory Doctorow is easy. You just flip the on switch by asking the first question, and he emits a constant stream of brilliant, insightful stuff. Editing interviews with Doctorow is easy as well. He generally speaks in coherent, whole sentences and frequently expresses complex ideas for some length that don’t get lost mid-paragraph. So it’s a pleasure to present this conversation…”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, February 9th, 2007 at 8:19 am
Also published in Copyright | Comments Off



Personal bookprinting

“As commercial book publishing crashes, personal book publishing is booming. Personal book making entails printing high-quality books in very small quantities, including quantities of one. New technologies permit anyone to print one copy of a softcover or hardcover book, including all-color photo books. These printed-on-demand books are indistinguishable from commercially printed books. In fact, some of the books you buy on Amazon are manufactured with this same technology. You just can’t tell the difference. However, being able to print as few as one copy — instead of a minimum of a thousand — shifts the economics of bookmaking toward individuals with more passion than money.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, December 13th, 2006 at 6:40 pm
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Things Designers Want For Christmas

Greg Storey: “I’m often asked what books I’m reading, what books I’ve read. Here is a core sample of my larger library. These are the books and subscriptions that I have around me at all times — with a gadget fetish twist at the end…”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, December 11th, 2006 at 10:03 am
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Confessions of a Bookplate Junkie

“Random thoughts [and links and images] from a passionate bookplate collector.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, November 8th, 2006 at 7:21 am
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Kronos video

Sample visual
Check out this video we made for Kronos to help celebrate International Women's Day, 2011. Learn more in this xBlog post or jump over to YouTube and watch it there.

Azure poster

Sample visual
XPLANE | Dachis Group developed a A vibrant, engaging poster showing how Microsoft Azure enables developers to run applications and store data on Microsoft servers. The poster recently took top honors in the American Business Awards.

Tweets & Flickrs