Dec 31
December 2008
Frank Chimero does. Where I might be tempted to add another layer of imagery and/or explanation to these illustrations, he is confident enough to hold back. That "sense of subtraction" is one of the most important skills a designer can possess.

One of Chimero's posters aimed at inspiring designers...
And his portfolio...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Before & After: Page Design...
Dec 29
December 2008
Time for the 2008 installment of Bill Gardner's excellent series on logo design trends for LogoLounge.com. Mark it "must read."

2008 logo design trends from LogoLounge.com...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Templates for InDesign, QuarkXpress, or PageMaker...
Dec 26
December 2008
I want to use this site as a catalyst for a discussion. I like the design--it's an interesting approach to teaching people how to react when an earthquake hits.
But it also raises two questions about user interface. First, does inviting the reader to pick and choose what they want to read and to potentially bypass a critical aspect of the presentation the best way to cover the information?
And second, is a multiple choice question that plants right answers among wrong answers the best way to help readers learn and retain answers in a potentially crisis situation?
UI experts (and others), I'd love to hear your thoughts.

The earthquake quiz...
NEW in the Ideabook Design Store: Tintbook CMYK Process Color Selector...
Dec 24
December 2008
It's a claim that stirs more than a little controversy, but FontShop gave it a shot. They enlisted seven people who most would acknowledge as experts and weighted the list as follows:
Sales figures: 40%
Historical significance: 30%
Aesthetic quality: 30%
It is opinion, obviously, but pretty interesting.

The list...
A rough translation of the explanation (German to English) via Google Translate ...
A booklet with the list and illustrations (in German) (6.8MB PDF)...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Templates for InDesign, QuarkXpress, or PageMaker...
Dec 22
December 2008
Charmingwall.com bills itself as, "A New York gallery specializing in a curated selection of open-edition fine art prints." What I want to show you is how they establish a foundational illustration and take you to the different site categories by modifying that illustration. A solid idea that could be reinterpreted in many different ways.

Charmingwall.com...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Templates for InDesign, QuarkXpress, or PageMaker...
Dec 19
December 2008
If you have not been to an Anthropologie store lately, I encourage you to stop by. It is all about design--they offer an eclectic mix of woman's clothing, tableware, books, and furnishings all accentuated by truly creative, one-of-a-kind displays and fixtures.
I'm guessing this is at least one direction of future retailing. This approach (versus a conventional department store) sells one point of view, a certain set of tastes, a particular mindset—something approaching a lifestyle. I really love the place. For a chain with many stores nationwide, it is amazing how unique they are able to make each.
To get the idea, you'll have to take a field trip—what you do not get from the Anthropologie web site is the importance of the store displays and fixtures to the experience. They are, in some cases, the best part.

Anthropologie.com...
They have some great letters...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Design-It-Yourself: Graphic Workshop...
Dec 17
December 2008
Isn't that what faux drop shadows and reflections are all about? Russian designer Yulia Brodskaya did just that by creating a series of three-dimensional cut-paper illustrations for G2, a supplement of the British newspaper the Guardian.

An example from G2...
Brodskaya's illustration portfolio...
NEW in the Ideabook Design Store: Tintbook CMYK Process Color Selector...
Dec 15
December 2008
A solid set of notes is often the most valuable outcome of attending a conference. Good notes are certainly not a substitute for attending and making all the associated connections, but composing and referring to a thoughtful set of notes is definitely useful.
To call Mike Rohde's "sketchnotes" useful would play them short. These notes are both a valuble resource and a lesson in visualizing information.

User Interface Engineering...
The Sketches category of Rohde's blog...
In the Ideabook Design Store: The Color Harmony Guide...
Dec 12
December 2008
The saying is, "Do as I do, not as I say." If you want to see what the usability experts view as state of the art interface design, you would expect they are using it themselves. There is much to learn by simply looking at how the experts set up their own site navigation.
A few interesting examples:

User Interface Engineering...
Nielsen Norman Group...
Adaptive Path...
In the Ideabook Design Store: The Copywriter's Handbook...
Dec 10
December 2008
In this recent article, David Pache at Dache presented the logos of 100 leading branding firms in black and white to, in essence, level the playing field. It made me wonder if it might be time to adopt the use of color as a foundational component of logo design. Isn't the reasoning for the need of a straight black and white version antiquated?

100 Brands of Interest...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Templates for InDesign, QuarkXpress, or PageMaker...
Dec 1
December 2008
This struck me as a particularly interesting use of positive and negative space. I like the way the designer changes the colors in the counterforms of select letters and numbers and how she uses a mixture of positive and reverse type.
Lots of good design appears to be uncomplicated (which means, of course, that it is)--it is often more about confidence in your choices than it is your ability to be wildly creative.

NEA Jazz in the Schools...
Agnieszka Gasparska of Kiss Me I'm Polish is credited with the design...
In the Ideabook Design Store: Pantone Guide to Communicating with Color...