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Design

Topic archive / 918 posts

beginning a day to be spent at the intersection of power tools, spray paint, and graphic design.

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Today's Layer Tennis match is an epileptic's worst nightmare.

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learning, at press time, that the opaque white ink used in offset printing is not all that opaque.

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Consumption: November 2007

On the Web
  • Fray Returns: The beloved site filled with true stories is reborn as a printed quarterly volume!
  • Design Doing: A nice roundup and response to recent conversations regarding the relevance of web design within the greater spectrum of design.
  • Charts and Graphs of Rap Song Lyrics: The title says it all. Fall-down funny stuff.
  • Curriculum Vitae: The long-awaited followup to The Story of Eh, this fantastic new book of comics from Kevin Cornell… See more →
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Pretty much anything will seem a frivolous followup to my last tweet, but I'm really digging today's Layer Tennis match so far.

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wasn't going to finish this AIGA article, but glad I did (there's a real gem at the end): aiga.org/content.cfm/a-foolpr…

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discovering the Photoshop DCS format, which didn't exist the last time I did prepress spot color separations in Photoshop, many years ago.

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noticing that I tend to arrange shelf contents as if I were setting type: flush left.

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Anyone know of any freeware or shareware apps that can produce vector EPS barcodes?

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just opened up my very own deluxe limited edition Helvetica DVD, complete with a lead Helvetica Neue Bold Extended letter S!

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disappointed in the selection of battle axes served up by Google Images.

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kicking off A Day in the CSS Zen Garden at the Happy Cog Philly office.

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"customizing" a "customizable" Flash video player.

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wondering just how many clicks it takes to get to the Unsubscribe center of the Print Magazine newsletter.

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wishing Photoshop would let me set up grid preferences for individual documents.

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Consumption: October 2007

On the Web
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Call me biased, but so far, @jasonsantamaria is thwomping Brian Taylor in today's Layer Tennis match.

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cursing the gnomes that infiltrated my copy of Photoshop last night. I envision the scene looking like the campfire sequences in Golden Axe.

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completely fucking sick of Photoshop color profile bullshit.

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More revisions! More changes! Soon I'll be the queen of endlessly iterative design! Uh, I mean king! King!

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wishing anti-theft packaging didn't equate to anti-consumer packaging.

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looking for a good vendor for custom wax seals. Any suggestions?

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not surprised that Andy Rutledge won't be the one to get me into podcasts.

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enjoying wireframing with OmniGraffle about as much as I ever have, which is to say I am not enjoying it at all.

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Consumption: September 2007

On the Web
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Thirty Days Has September

Another busy summer has come and gone, most of the fruits of which are still not quite ripe enough to talk about. I do, however, have a few things going on this month that are worth a mention.

Screens ’N’ Spokes

Throughout the year and across the country, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society hosts the MS Bike Ride, a lengthy cycling excursion whose participants have raised a considerable amount of money to fight the organization’s… See more →

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Consumption: August 2007

On the Web
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Consumption: July 2007

On the Web
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Consumption: June 2007

On the Web
  • My Favorite Font: Some writers of renown reveal the typefaces they use for composition. It pleased me to see that the abundance of Courier and Times owes as much to a reverence for the art of typesetting (“Although it’s a thrill to see my words printed in such elegant fonts, I’d never actually write in them.”) as it owes to the legacy of typewriters and word processors.
  • Camp Naked Terror 6 Photos… See more →
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Consumption: April 2007

On the Web
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Consumption: March 2007

On the Web
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Bridging the Type Divide: Classic Typography with CSS

A brief history of type

Like all the arts, [typography] is basically immune to progress, though it is not immune to change. —Robert Bringhurst, The Elements of Typographic Style

The art of typography has a rich and storied tradition, and like most art forms, its production processes have moved at a snail’s pace. After Gutenberg’s landmark invention of movable type (a printing method consisting of individual letters carved out of metal) in the fifteenth century, the… See more →

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South by Southwest Interactive & Film 2007

Whoever “they” are, they say you never forget your first time. And in 2005, my first SXSW was definitely unforgettable. They also say twice is nice, and as such, my second SXSW was all sugar and spice. As we all know, though, the third time is the charm, and this year’s SXSW charmed the hell out of me.

The people, panels, presentations, and parties were more plentiful than ever, but I still managed to absorb… See more →

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Consumption: February 2007

On the Web
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The Hunt Is on at SXSW

I’ve done a bad thing. And I didn’t act alone.

Nine esteemed colleagues and I collaborated with Friends of ED editor Chris Mills to create a book called Web Standards Creativity, which will be released early in March. It is poised to infect the minds of innumerable readers with several creative approaches to standards-based web design and development. These progressive ideas in XHTML, CSS, and DOM scripting could single-handedly set back the cause of mediocrity… See more →

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Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann

One doesn’t often have the opportunity to work on a project that strengthens his skills in multiple disciplines and helps him reevaluate his connection to his heritage. I have been fortunate to have just such an opportunity, and after months of hard work, that project is now available for public consumption.

In late August of last year, a handful of Happy Cogs flew out to Dublin to meet with some of the cheerful folks who… See more →

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Consumption: January 2007

On the Web
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The Ten Commandments of Typography book cover

The Ten Commandments of Typography / Type Heresy: Breaking the Ten Commandments of Typography

This could be a great book if it bothered to go into any actual detail or offer any really compelling arguments for or against abiding by typographic principles. Instead, it offers two equally under-developed halves. The first half gives us the ten “commandments,” several of which are typographically context-specific, and each of which has barely a sentence of explanation or justification for why it should be followed. The second half of the book supposedly describes… See more →

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Consumption: November 2006

On the Web
  • A Rumsfeld Rememberance: Hilarious manipulation of Donald Rumsfeld press conference footage.
  • Mr. City Men: Cute, mute CG characters seamlessly animated into handheld video footage. I defy anyone to watch Mr. Fortune without cracking a smile.
  • FontBook: Now in its fourth edition, this massive tome compiles 32,000 type samples on 1,760 pages!
In the Stereo
On the Silver Screen
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Consumption: October 2006

On the Web
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How I Spent My Summer Vacation

When I saw the gorgeously dreadful October 2006 edition of Stan’s site on Sunday, I remembered that I had intended to dust off my site’s costume from last year and put it back on. I dug around in my files, and was somewhat horrified to discover that the costume had vanished. Then I realized that if I was looking for that costume, summer must have ended. And boy oh boy, was there a lot of… See more →

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Consumption: September 2006

On the Web
In the Stereo
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Consumption: August 2006

On the Web
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Consumption: July 2006

On the Web
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First Born

Through an act of either charity or desperation, Born Magazine allowed me to contribute to its Summer 2006 issue, which launched recently. Having been a great admirer of Born for several years, I was honored to participate.

In its own words, “Born Magazine is an experimental venue marrying literary arts and interactive media. Original projects are brought to life every three months through creative collaboration between writers and artists.” I have always found their use… See more →

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Consumption: June 2006

On the Web
In the… See more →
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Titonic

It was the beginning of a new millennium. School was in my past, a magazine production job in Manhattan was in my future, and limbo consisted of waiting tables in New Brunswick, New Jersey. It may as well have been Mars. I knew no one, and my ghetto neighborhood, animosity for hostile Jersey traffic, and underdeveloped sense of direction prevented me from venturing out much (to say nothing of the dearth of places worth visiting).… See more →

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Consumption: May 2006

On the Web
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Consumption: April 2006

On the Web
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Consumption: March 2006

On the Web
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