Friday, December 21, 2007
Classic Olde Tyme Typesetting
I found this wanted poster for John Wilkes Booth posted on Wikipedia today. Our predicessors had it much rougher than we.
Couple things I've noticed:
The many typefaces used.
The large spaces after period marks.
Paragraphs are justified (must have been a huge pain to do this by hand)
Inconsistent upper case and lower case usage
Inconsistent Indents.
With all of these issues with the poster it remains an effective piece of attention grabbing design. I really enjoy looking at old professional prints/typography such as this. I wonder, the difficulties and hardships typesetters of old had with setting up and producing a document like this where the errors I pointed out are accepted, did they actually have it tougher than us? We have more options, high standards, millions of colors, paper choices, printing choices, software, hardware, stupid clients and greater competition? Hm...
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Customize Your Work Prison
If I had to be stuck in a cube all day at work I would have to hook it up like one of these. The sci-fi one may be the coolest of ones posted here but I would like to set up a mad scientist lab or something. It kinda makes me want to give up my panaramic view of the crappy parking lot, almost.
(Courtesy of Wired via Yahoo)
Friday, December 14, 2007
Vintage Poison
I like whiskey.
About 8 years ago I was out hanging with some buddies. It was more like hardcore binge drinking but, whatever. I was out, fresh after a tough break-up with a bitch girlfriend and we were doing some drinking. As with most times back then the boozing drifted into the wee hours of the night, consciousness was difficult, rational thinking was extinct and simple, animalistic actions were the rule. What I surmise as near 4 A.M. I got into a fight with my buddy (he happens to be about 6'4" 250 lb. monster) and decided my friends were all assholes and I was going home. So, I went home.
At this time I was living with mom and dad still. Somehow I made it home alive and not in cuffs. When I crept into the house, I walked to the kitchen to have myself a drink. Not sure if it was to be water or booze but again, whatever. Upon stumbling into the kitchen I noticed some really old looking bottles on the counter. I picked one up, peered at it through blood shot eyes and my jaw flopped open. The label read "Pre-war whiskey, not to be sold." The PA LCB sticker on the lid said something about prohibition and not for sale. My god, I thought, forbidden whiskey that is like 85 years old.
Odd stuff always made it's way up from my parents basement. The house was old and the guy who lived there before us was rich and had a bunch of bullshit down there. So I had my hands on some vintage, old american whiskey. Upon closer inspection I noticed there were only a few ounces in the bottle. My only chance to enjoy some vintage good stuff? Mine, mine, mine. I drank them. Big mistake. Greed tempted me to selfishly enjoy the last of the old stuff. I never thought to smell the liquid. I should have. My desire to keep all of the booty to myself overwhelmed my good sense. I wish it didn't. The booze was gone and, sadly, it wasn't booze. Poison. The first thought that screamed through my blurry mind was "my god I've killed myself." I drank something that I could not identify. It was some sort of evil chemical used for removing things or something. Survival instincts. I went and guzzled milk, I know that helps. The taste was noxious and consuming. The smell unmistakable. What to do now? Complete exhaustion and retarded drunkenness were boiling over, I needed to sleep. As with most thing back then I said, fuck it. If I die it will be in my sleep but I got to get to sleep. The birds where chirping. Up the steps, into bed, poisonous fumes wafting from my throat, the smell unmistakable, I hoped I wouldn't die.
Needless to say, I lived. The night forever tattooed into my memory, my senses won't let me forget. Since then I've told this story many, many times. During the first 50 or so times I could still taste and smell the chemical, the smell was unmistakable. I keep the bottle as both a cool antique and a piece of history, my history. The history of the night I drank vintage poison.
About 8 years ago I was out hanging with some buddies. It was more like hardcore binge drinking but, whatever. I was out, fresh after a tough break-up with a bitch girlfriend and we were doing some drinking. As with most times back then the boozing drifted into the wee hours of the night, consciousness was difficult, rational thinking was extinct and simple, animalistic actions were the rule. What I surmise as near 4 A.M. I got into a fight with my buddy (he happens to be about 6'4" 250 lb. monster) and decided my friends were all assholes and I was going home. So, I went home.
At this time I was living with mom and dad still. Somehow I made it home alive and not in cuffs. When I crept into the house, I walked to the kitchen to have myself a drink. Not sure if it was to be water or booze but again, whatever. Upon stumbling into the kitchen I noticed some really old looking bottles on the counter. I picked one up, peered at it through blood shot eyes and my jaw flopped open. The label read "Pre-war whiskey, not to be sold." The PA LCB sticker on the lid said something about prohibition and not for sale. My god, I thought, forbidden whiskey that is like 85 years old.
Odd stuff always made it's way up from my parents basement. The house was old and the guy who lived there before us was rich and had a bunch of bullshit down there. So I had my hands on some vintage, old american whiskey. Upon closer inspection I noticed there were only a few ounces in the bottle. My only chance to enjoy some vintage good stuff? Mine, mine, mine. I drank them. Big mistake. Greed tempted me to selfishly enjoy the last of the old stuff. I never thought to smell the liquid. I should have. My desire to keep all of the booty to myself overwhelmed my good sense. I wish it didn't. The booze was gone and, sadly, it wasn't booze. Poison. The first thought that screamed through my blurry mind was "my god I've killed myself." I drank something that I could not identify. It was some sort of evil chemical used for removing things or something. Survival instincts. I went and guzzled milk, I know that helps. The taste was noxious and consuming. The smell unmistakable. What to do now? Complete exhaustion and retarded drunkenness were boiling over, I needed to sleep. As with most thing back then I said, fuck it. If I die it will be in my sleep but I got to get to sleep. The birds where chirping. Up the steps, into bed, poisonous fumes wafting from my throat, the smell unmistakable, I hoped I wouldn't die.
Needless to say, I lived. The night forever tattooed into my memory, my senses won't let me forget. Since then I've told this story many, many times. During the first 50 or so times I could still taste and smell the chemical, the smell was unmistakable. I keep the bottle as both a cool antique and a piece of history, my history. The history of the night I drank vintage poison.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Warning Label
I love warning labels with the small illustration of some poor stick figure getting mangled, killed, smashed, eaten, etc. The Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch picks one out of the thousands, each year, and designates it the Wackiest. I get a kick out of these things.
This year's is great, titled "DANGER, AVOID DEATH." Fantastic.
(origin: yahoo new 12/13/07)
Monday, December 10, 2007
Know what a duotone is? You better act like you know!
Duotones, soiund it out with me dooo-oh-ton-zzz. Think of Batman and Robin AKA the Dynamic Duo or duet and duotone is a color setting in Ps that keeps an image 2 colors. Duotones are cool and can have a great effect oon something you are designing. First you need to convert your image to greyscale, next under the same option as you find greyscale (image>mode) you find the option for duotone. I made this coolr 2 page flyer for a trip to Europe, I think it has more character and class than just doing a standard full color brochure. Keep in mind that a duotone will only work in PS and Indesign, the color settings do not cross over into Illustrator, so convert it to a CMYK file.
Here is a good tutorial to get your feet wet.
Friday, December 7, 2007
Sow and Tell
For show and tell this week I brought in a card I made for my parents, I think the carbon dating on it looks to be near 1985. I thought Jabba the Hutt on a thank you for dinner and cake at thanksgiving was appropriate. Nothing has changed.
Also, I brought in an original Rubik's Cube in its original packaging. I have one that is open and playable however I also have this one still in the package, not sure if it is worth anything, don't care either (unless it is some insane amount), I just like having it around. It is all apart of my "I like cool stuff" mentality.
(I'll post picks once I have access to a scanner, I've been sick)
Also, I brought in an original Rubik's Cube in its original packaging. I have one that is open and playable however I also have this one still in the package, not sure if it is worth anything, don't care either (unless it is some insane amount), I just like having it around. It is all apart of my "I like cool stuff" mentality.
(I'll post picks once I have access to a scanner, I've been sick)
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Don't catch the office germs.
2 weeks ago I had a meeting with one of our product managers. She came to my office clutching damp, sickly tissues with her nose running, voice scratchy and gruff, eye watering. A few days later I was lucky enough to develop the same symptoms plus some added bonus afflictions. While this post doesn't really apply to graphic design in general, but since most of us work in an office and deal with any number of different clients, coworkers, civilians we all risk one of these people tossing us some awesome bacteria that cause a sweet 3 weeks of miserable sickness. All the green tea in the world won't make the difference you want unless you educate yourself and keep you shit clean.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)