In association with Google Chrome, Chris Milk just released an interactive experience called The Wilderness Downtown. The video, which showcases Arcade Fire’s We Used to Wait, explores new functionality within HTML5 and shows how Google Chrome is pushing the limits. It’s a great example of interactivity that connects meaningful media and personalized content.
There is a great article about the Copenhagen Wheel on Fast Company. The wheel is a product of MIT’s Senseable City Lab, a lab dedicated to studying the evolution of cities through emerging sensor technologies. A short teaser that explains the wheel follows.
The wheel is remarkable for a number of reasons. First, two student design teams created it. Second, it illustrates the power of collaboration — between students, institutions, and municipalities. Third, beyond an engineering improvement, the wheel connects the cyclist to a digital ecosystem, which includes rich information, social networking, and incentives. In many ways, it is the product of the future, connecting the user to an immersive experience that extends well beyond the tangible product. Fourth, it shows us how cool sustainable solutions will become. And, at a predicted price of $600, it will be affordable.
I can’t wait to order mine. In fact, if MIT and Ducati allowed pre-orders, I would be on the list.
Another great entry into The Dollar ReDe$ign Project. This clean design from Dowling and Duncan breathes new life into the buck. Via Design Boom.
I just started Making Ideas Happen and plan to write a complete review when I finish the book, but I wanted to share a couple of opening insights from the book. First, creativity is not enough. Every well-known creative has a system for realizing their ideas, and as Belsky suggests, that system is rooted in organization, community, and leadership. Second, a number of creative people will never realize the fruits of their labor, because they believe that creativity has to occur in an unstructured, chaotic environment. To steal an idea from Dee Hock, I think that creativity thrives in a chaordic environment, where order is brought to chaos. Third, every project, creative of otherwise, is composed of many baby steps that lead to a point of realization. Managing those steps is often the key to success. More to come, but I thought that I would share a few thoughts as I dig into the book. Get your copy and read along. I’d love to hear what you have to say.
Mario Hugo’s portfolio is something to behold. Full of moody and intensive illustration, the work moves seamlessly from surrealism to modern typography. All of the work has an eccentric and unique voice. Via But Does It Float.
Directed by Josh Raskin and illustrated by James Braithwaite and Alex Kurina, I Met the Walrus was nominated for the 2008 Academy Award for Animated Short and won the 2009 Emmy.
As many will tell you, the great lessons of design are rarely gleaned from a book or learned by sitting in a classroom. Design thrives on multidisciplinary experience, an immersion into the unknown and a search for the unknowable. If you are looking for such an experience, look no further than the hallowed grounds of the Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church. One three-hour service will convert you and possibly, make you into a different designer.
As I sat in church, jazz music flowing over me and through me, I was amazed by the one-of-a-kind environment that the Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church has consciously and unconsciously designed. If as Hank often said, design is simply a plan to make something, this plan was truly inspired. The church has all of the elements that are present in great design. First, it builds on tradition, breathing new life into something you know. Second, it breaks with tradition and reveals the stuff you have been missing. Finally, it disregards rules in favor of experience, and in this case, an experience that you will not forget. Here’s why.
With deference, the church uses tradition as a touchstone. If you attend other religious services, you will sing hymns, hear performances by talented musicians, be treated to a gospel or two, and last but not least, receive a healthy serving of sage and universal wisdom. The Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church does not disappoint. It delivers in all of these areas; however, the delivery is unique.
The music is organic, never stopping, never starting. It is simply a necessary element. The gospel is delivered with a smile and a welcoming invitation, and in my case, it was delivered by a glowing woman, wise beyond her years. And, the wisdom, so often delivered with a hint of fear, is delivered democratically. Archbishop Franzo King is not above you; he is with you, staring you squarely in the eye. The paintings, as represented above, deliver Marie, Joseph, and the Baby Jesus. (And, of course, Saint John is alive in the room.)
How is good design different? It isn’t. Good design should build on tradition, turning what you know into what you’ve never seen. It should treat its audience as an equal, never pandering or underestimating the people to whom it speaks. Finally, instead of an intrusion, it should be a welcome addition. It should act like it has always been there, like it always will be there.
Yet, the church is not like any church into which you have entered. The first hour and 45 minutes were a jazz immersion. There was no surfacing for breath, as song bled into song, as dance and performance mixed with the proceedings of the morning. As Archbishop King put it, we were raising our praises and acknowledging our blessings through performance. It was a concert. It was an opportunity to dance. It was an experience to write about.
Like good design, the church’s service breaks with tradition. It is not a stayed ceremony with time allotments. It’s dogma is the lack of dogma. Like the thinking behind a piece by James Victore, it acts like it failed to learn the rules. If you don’t know them, then you aren’t beholden to them. And, the result is new; it’s fresh; it’s unexpected. Good design isn’t a sum of parts. Good design is a synergy of parts, a combination that breeds something new, something unexpected.
The final lesson, and perhaps the most important. The church welcomes all people, and this welcome extends well beyond convention. From performers entering and exiting during the service, to kids moving freely around the space, to unexpected additions, the importance of the execution does not outweigh the importance of the principle experience. Too often, design seeks to erase the possibility of romance and intrigue, replacing it instead with an empty search for perfection. A tightening of bolts that causes the machine to burst.
Not this church, a church where a 15-minute tap performance is seamlessly inserted into the experience, a church where people enter and leave freely, a church where children take on instruments and feel like a welcome addition to the experience.
In essence, it’s inspired. It is inspired by John Coltrane, a musician without equal who honored his relationship with a spiritual higher power. It is inspired by the church’s leadership. It is inspired by a nomadic and changing congregation, which immediately feels comfortable. And, it happens because it speaks to and fulfills a need for inspiration in all of us.
So, designers go fourth, and “Get your praise on!” Church is always in session.
The Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church worships from 12:00 to 3:00 PM Sundays. It is located at 1286 Fillmore Street in San Francisco.
Project M just launched 100 HAMMERS, a collaborative project inspired by David McLaughlin. The project story follows:
100 Hammers is a collaborative project inspired by Maine artist, David McLaughlin,a locally known craftsman and collector who passed away in early May of 2010. David spent his life inspiring others not just through his art but through his passion to see and bring new life to otherwise unwanted materials. We’ve gathered 100 second-hand hammers and intend to keep his dream alive by passing them along to people who can give them a life they otherwise wouldn’t have had, creating a new and unique history for each hammer.
Selected participants choose a hammer from our collection and are asked to create an art piece with it (in whatever form it may take, nothing is off-limits). Once the hammer has shipped, they’re given one month to complete a project and are then encouraged toshare
it on our site for the 100 Hammers community to enjoy. If the artist chooses, they can also donate their piece to be sold with the proceeds benefiting local art and design projects on David’s behalf. The hammer is then shipped back to the 100 Hammers library to continue it’s cycle of creation.
Select your hammer and get started.
The Branding Comedy cleverly maps brands to the levels of hell. It’s interesting to see who made it into paradise. The full book is available for review on ISSUU.
A great video of Michael Bierut at 99 Percent. In the video, he talks about his process — specifically, how he generates ideas. (SPOILER: It’s listening to clients.) Every designer will benefit from this video.
The AIGA just relaunched The Living Principles web site, creating a collaborative and open space for sharing projects that realize the power of The Living Principles Framework. If you are not familiar with The Living Principles, a short introduction follows:
The Living Principles for Design framework aims to clarify the multiple, interrelated dimensions of sustainability and guide purposeful action in everyday design and business practice. Drawing from decades of collective wisdom, theory and results, the framework weaves environmental, social, economic and cultural sustainability into an actionable, integrated approach that can be consistently communicated to designers, business leaders, educators, and the public.
When you have a free moment, join the community and share your perspective on the evolving role of sustainability in design.
What does the Supreme Court discuss, and why do we always make such a fuss? This information graphic from mgmt.design answers that question and others. Guess what? It’s mostly a bunch of chatter. Via Fast Company Co.Design.
There is a wonderful entry on I Love Typography about the logic and launch of Commercial Type, a new type foundry. Right now, they have a small number of beautifully designed typefaces, which reflect the attention of the foundry’s founders. The Commercial Type web site is also a beautiful example of design.
I love to see the aesthetic of people directly reflected in their work. Follow Commercial Type on Twitter to learn about the latest releases.
Check out the Bloomberg L.P. Corporate Headquarters, which was designed by Lisa Strausfeld of Pentagram. Strausfeld won the 2010 National Design Award for interaction.
Get your letterpress on daily. This is a great resource for typographers, students of type, and people who cherish the letterpress.
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