
This chair should come with glow-in-the-dark stars.

This chair should come with glow-in-the-dark stars.

Nothing is better than color coordinated notebooks and graph paper.
Tis the season! I WANT.

Many talented young designers today have abandoned their roles as improvers of the general visual environment. Many only want to work on cultural work, or not-for-profit work, or on projects they perceive as “good-for-society” which may have a high profile within the design milieu, but don’t really reach ordinary people. These designers are afraid to get involved in mainstream packaging, promotion or corporate work. They forget that these are the products and messages that most people really encounter in their daily lives, that these products and services are at the heart of the American condition, and that there is responsibility for us as designers, always, to raise the expectation of what design can be. We are responsible for that daily experience. These “ivory tower designers” leave the job to others (ad agencies, schlock shops, etc.) who are simply doing it for the money, and are often cynical about the outcome.
read the full article here.

I think this graphical breakdown of Baltimore is extremely informative as well as beeeeutiful.
Having just worked with the Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators Alliance on their new website, I can appreciate the concise informative solution these maps and charts offer to the viewer.
See a larger view of the chart here.

I found this article and illustration work at a perfect time.
Maybe it’s the years worth of luggage under each of my eyeballs or maybe because I went for a run yesterday and ended up about four miles from my apartment without noticing.
I need a vacation.

I bought a few of these amazing posters for Christmas presents this year. I want one for Baltimore!
go to http://www.orkposters.com to check out the rest of the work.