augmenting big ben

Detail of the exquisite/intricate clock face of the Big Ben.

Designed by Augustus Pugin.

2014 • 10 • 28  permalink
 max lapteff's nasa

Max Lapteff proposes an alternate/imaginative/inspired/evocative/beautiful redesign/reimagining of NASA's image/identity/brand.

2014 • 10 • 27  permalink
 red telephone box

Time for another (design) classic. This time, the very British red telephone box.

Design by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.

2014 • 10 • 21  permalink

The beauty of fractals. Interactive and in real time.

Available for IOs based (mobile) machines.

2014 • 10 • 20  permalink
 climbing the stairs

Great ad for match.com (attributed to Noah Phillips).

2014 • 10 • 16  permalink

Recounting the story of 'Keep Calm and Carry On':

2014 • 10 • 07  permalink

Brainchild of Gábor Domokos and Péter Várkonyi, after a conjecture/question by Vladimir Arnold.

Definition:

The 'Gömböc' is the first known homogenous object with one stable and one unstable equilibrium point, thus two equilibria altogether on a horizontal surface. It can be proven that no object with less than two equilibria exists.

2014 • 09 • 30  permalink
2014 • 09 • 16  permalink
 matching colors

How to use the Match Color feature in Photoshop, to take advantage of the knowledge/wisdom (about color) of The Old Masters, and apply it to our own photos.

2014 • 09 • 11  permalink
 counting words

A story, by Marissa Mayer (then at Google), about metrics and simplicity:

[...]
I worked my way through the email queue. And then I saw it: The next email had just a number ("37") in the subject - and no message text. What a weird form of spam, I thought. Why would anyone be motivated to just send a number? I searched for the user's email address to see what else had been sent. Interesting. Lots of numbers: 33, 53, and then a clue: "61, getting a bit heavy, aren't we?" Furthermore, the date on each of the messages seemed very familiar. Then I realized that's because the dates were all days that I had launched various changes on the homepage. "Getting a bit heavy?" - that one did correspond to one of the wordiest homepage releases we had ever done. Could the sender be counting words? Sure enough, I looked back, counted the words myself, and he was - a manual, human version of a scale for the Google homepage. He was weighing our homepage and letting us know when it was getting too heavy. One of his earliest mails had a note in the body: "What happened to the days of 13?" - referring to the word count on the initial 1999 homepage.

This mystery and its revelation was really interesting because I thought about the homepage, and how to keep it simple, all the time. Yet I hadn't thought to look at it through this very simple lens: just count the words. The fewer, the better.
[...]

2014 • 09 • 09  permalink
 sssmokin'!

Smoke typography Photoshop tutorial.

By/from Abduzeedo.

2014 • 07 • 31  permalink
2014 • 07 • 25  permalink
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