December 2010
23 posts
Happy Holidays!!!
Happy Holidays Everyone!!
Bless you all and look forward ot an amazing 2011! ;)
WW20
Wordage Weekly 20. Check it out!
Peter Crawley
Peter Crawley’s Stitched iIllustrations. You know how much I love string.
Great Gatsby, Batman! Sweet Logos!
Chapter four of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby reads like a VIP guest list of the Jazz Age. Taking inspiration from those pages, this poster is comprised of the business cards and personal stationery of the movers and shakers that attended Gatsby’s parties in the summer of 1922.
This poster was made by The Heads of State, the award-winning design and illustration...
I’m more an Anglaise man myself…
Herb Lubalin
Comedy Central’s new Look:
Now, here’s a set of new branding that I don’t initially hate. Not that I’m opposed to every single new branding overhaul out there, but it’s been a trend with me that I’m at first opposed to new branding projects. This however, is different. I actually enjoy this rebranding. It sets a new (and I think better) tone for Comedy...
Words and meaning...
If you know me, you know that I’m on a never ending search to discover meaning in words through typography. Stefan Chinof does it pretty well.
The Perfect Advent Calendar
This calendar by Eleventy’s Naomi Duckworth in Dallas Texas is most excellent. Buy one at their etsy shop! Yes, even though we’re already several days in.
Wordage Nineteen!
My submission to this week’s Wordage Weekly is a mix of many things. Based on the words “This is the world. This is the way things are.”, I created the Wordage by simply letting twitter tell me the answers. I clicked on every link in the last 8 hours that my twitter feed told me to go to. At each site, I took one letter to make the whole composition. This image is to say...
Green Patriot Poster
“Dead End is part of a body of work made for the street protests during the 2009 G20 Summit in London, Copenhagen during COP15 and Bolivia during the People’s Summit,” said Noel Douglas. “Graphic communication can foreground the contradictions of capitalism, or open windows onto new worlds. But they must serve human and not commercial needs.”