I don't know what I like more: the clothes, haircuts, period graphics equipment. And sure, who doesn't like giant hands. What is this from? There has to be a story.
From his blog: "The rules are simple: I put the self-timer on 2 seconds, push the button and try to get as far from the camera as I can." What more can I add? You must follow the link to his site; one is interesting, 100's are delightful. See a lot more at Running From Camera Found at Swiss Miss
I've been a fan of the work BBDO has done for The Economist; it's clean, clever, and most important: thought-provoking. (How's that for punctuation?) And changing it at this point is, in my mind, akin to changing the Absolut campaign after just 3 years. But their new stuff is just as clever, bright, and stand-out good. Shows that the first campaign wasn't a fluke. These Creatives got depth of talent, and the highest professional ability. By AMV.BBDO Link to more samples. Via Advertising/Design Goodness
It's hard to follow up after a triumph, (see Sony Bravia) but I guess if your message has legs, your concept rolls out easier. As a father of 2 young daughters, I like this. A girl likes to be a girl, and put on makeup and dress pretty; but the fashion/beauty industry has gone overboard with convincing women they're just not pretty enough...but can get a little closer to acceptable with " ". Playing games with girls' self image to sell them 20¢ worth of grease paint for $6.95, 40¢ worth of shampoo for $16.50, and still they can't measure up. I'm left with more respect for the tobacco industry. Great campaigns don't seem to start with, "Let's sell more of this stuff," but with a notion to redirect society, change thinking. Sometimes it's just recognizing a movement waiting to happen and getting out in front. Only thing that bothers me is; there's no such thing as a boy or man in Dove-world. I don't know if that's a step up from the normal ad-fact that "men are idiots." by Ogilvy via Adverblog Ref Evolution videoDove FilmDove True Colors
Laura Schreiber, a freelance illustrator, took a nice vacation on a lake. She painted some watercolors and sent them as postcards to her friends here. Each was beautifully done, but the real gas was when they line up together. Click the changing picture above to see. *The artist tells me this is an ocean, not a lake. Oops. I thought those were lakegulls.
I finally got to try some 3D phtography myself, with a second-hand Bell & Howell Colorist camera. I'll go into some tech details later in the comments. Here are some of the great 3-dimensional folks I work with; and a good capture of their brilliant spirit.
Designer Michael Shannon shares a sweet little tutorial on bookbinding. No real detail on correct cover making, but it's goodness is it's simplicity. Sewing and joining signatures with easy steps and clear pictures. Just enough to inspire a person to make a first attempt. What could be better.
A really neat idea just a little off in execution. This is a light switch modified as a clothing hook. The problem is it's off when down, on when up. I'd buy in if hanging my jacket on the hook lit the lights, and taking my jacket off the hook to leave turned them out. To be fair, there is a slew of real genius at this designer's site, Amron Exptl. I especially look forward to commercial production of the Brush and Rinse, the hardest "why-didn't-I-think-of-that" moment of my life.
Jim Bumgardner creates these beautiful images that illustrate trends. He'll pick a topic, like for the images shown: sunset, and then make/use software that places images gathered from Flickr onto a graph by time and date taken, assigns a translucency to the photos, and the pattern or trend reveals itself in the resulting composite image. The cool thing here is the trend revealed actually signifies the changing time of sunset. The bottom of the "curve" is summer solstice. I especially liked his trend image for photos tagged breakfast, lunch and dinner. The best thing is, I think he just does this for fun. He works at Yahoo! and facilitates some nice collaborations at Flickr.
I came across this neat "humanlocator™" at Swiss Miss, and dug just a little into the development company, Freeset. There's a lot to learn from them about smart use of interactivity. I've heard a lot of succesful bizmen who based their operations on collaboration, and common core advice from them boiled down to requiring partners, big or small, to have skin in the game. Good interactivity does just that, requires the viewer to put skin in the game, and make them a partner. Even their company introduction page reveals their headline only as you rolll over the words, and you have to keep rolling over to keep them up as they fade. "What if people don't bother to point there? They won't see it." If they don't have to interact with it, they may not bother to point their brain at it. Engaging is better.
I like 3D stuff. I like the kind you use a stereograph for, the red and blue glasses (anaglyph), and the perpendicular polarizing glasses. Though I could never see those magic eye posters, so I hated those. Lately I've seen a 3D imagery technology on the internet that gives a 3D feel even if you're missing an eye. It kicks back and forth from left to right eye view. This attached image is an example I especially like because it mixes 3D imaging with a nicely done time lapse.
Minnesota Photographer Thomas Allen cuts up and folds old pulp paperbacks and photographs these little scenes. His manipulation adds drama to every one of them. It's the kind of artwork that can show you how to find beauty in the commonplace. You won't pass by the box of 5¢ used paperbacks so quickly next time. Really delightful.
We've been starting to collect examples of charting solutions here at work, since so many of our assignments are to chart clinical test data. It's a challenge to produce a new way to visualize a bar chart the hundredth time. This company, Catalogtree, seems to thrive on that challenge. Solution after solution. They're a good inspiration to offer new and better solutions; to get away from the dreaded "way it's always been done."
In case you don't know what you're supposed to do when you check into a hotel, you're supposed to photograph each other flying through the air from bed to bed. Then you upload the best photo to The Hotels by City Bedjumping page. In keeping with the current theme, we present ours with Philippe Halsman's (who invented jumping) photo of Savador Dali.
We scored a complaint from the front desk 15 minutes after checking in, by the way.
Here's my attempt: Picasso's Two Girls I'm hoping the great quality of the Previous "Last Supper" post and my hapless attempt will encourage more. The little one was a little too wiggly to get her facing at the right angle, but big sister proved a thoughtfull model; and both good sports with more or daddy's craziness. It was good fun.
My older daughter, seeing Picasso's original, asked, "Did he mean to do that?"
I'll begin with this delight and challenge. I found on Neatorama, this photo of schoolkids re-enacting the last supper. Now grab a kid, a camera, and a printout of a classic painting and reply with what you did. Bring your 8 year old onto a dock to recreate Munch's Scream; take your daughter into the field to photograph Wyeth's Christina's World; boys too rowdy on a rainy day? Places everybody, Guernica!
This is for sharing notable creative work in any medium and discipline. Please note the source, and the work's creator, whenever possible.
I hope this becomes an inspriration to readers, to take a cool concept and run with it, and share it back.
Purpose
This is for sharing notable creative work in any medium and discipline. Please note the source, and the work's creator, whenever possible. I hope this becomes an inspriration to readers, to take a cool concept and run with it, and share it back.