Showing posts with label Design Fetish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design Fetish. Show all posts

February 15, 2009

[Design Fetish] Calendars

Like the grid, the calendar is a vehicle well-suited for imaginative visual play. In particular, layering in a dimension of time can be communicated in diverse ways, as these examples demonstrate:



2009 Rare Book Calendar by digital publication services company 42-line



Napkins Calendar 2009 by designer Stas Aki



Offset Printed and Letterpress Printed 2009 Calendars by Egg Press



MalotaProjects Calendar 2009

It’s never too late to find the right calendar that will help—and maybe even inspire—you to plan activities and celebrate your milestones for the year.

January 7, 2009

[Design Fetish] Grids

Graphic design Wim Crouwel said, “A design should have some tension and some expression in itself. I like to compare it with the lines on a football field. It is a strict grid. In this grid you play a game and these can be nice games or very boring games.” Whether you view grids as a tool of liberation or a prison, grid-inspired works marked 2008:

Controlling interest and other grid-influenced artwork by Daniel Lefcourt (via swissmiss):



Graphic designer and typographer Antonio Carusone created The Grid System, an “ever-growing resource about grid systems, the golden ratio and baseline grids”:



Paul Armstrong of Wiseacre Design created web.without.words, a weekly showcase where he takes a popular website and strips it down to an arrangement of blocks:



By doing so, he practices his “core belief that hierarchy, grid systems and uniformity ultimately lead to a more natural user experience. By showing the overall structure of any website, by stripping naked all the distractions of text and ads and images and showing a site for what the eye unconsciously perceives.” Armstrong’s project reminds me of Internet Soul Portraits (I.S.P.) by Mark Callahan, an Artistic Director of Ideas for Creative Exploration (ICE) at the University of Georgia.

Beginning last November, Sol LeWitt: A Wall Drawing Retrospective was fully installed and opened to the public at MASS MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) and will be available to be experienced for the next 25 years. Reminiscent of the work by the geometric abstract art of Kazimir Malevich and the grid-based paintings of Piet Mondrian, LeWitt’s fascination with geometry connects with grids like his composition of rectangles and squares in Wall Drawing 792:


Photo: Hallie Scott

Described as “non-representational,” the work of Lewitt and his predecessors does represent something that’s kept alive the form-making communion with the world. Grids are getting back to basics and, at the same time, are vehicles that agitate the threshold between simplicity and complexity.

What is emphasized in these creations is an underlying structure that helps bring clarity to the overall form (Massimo Vignelli would agree in his downloadable Canon). Grids are usually associated with order, and a sense of order can be comforting, or, per Crouwel’s stand on grids, dull. In either case, they’re a way to makes sense of phenomenon, visual or otherwise.

August 29, 2008

[Design Fetish] Notebooks

The notebook remains a resilient vehicle for jotting down anything: words, phrases, passages, sketches, plans large and small, one line at a time. Here’s a sampling of products to help capture your noodling:

Action Book by Behance

Field Notes
by Draplin Design Company with Coudal Partners

Grid-It! Notepads



Linkable Notebooks by Start Here



Moleskine Notebooks

Napkin Notebook by Dave Arnold and Jason Kreher, Euro RSCG

Rhodia Writing Pads and Notebooks

But wait, there’s more: Museum of Notebooks and notebookism