(via Baubauhaus.)
Cameron Moll / Designer, Speaker, Author: Regret.
Kathryn Schulz, as quoted by Maria Popova:
If we have goals and dreams and we want to do our best, and if we love people and we don’t want to hurt them or lose them, we should feel pain when things go wrong. The point isn’t to live without any regrets, the point is to not hate ourselves for…
Monomyth is a look at the parallel, overlapping narratives found in science fiction movies. This book is the result of combining the plot lines of some of my favorite films. Accordingly, the images weave together multiple shapes and colors. Since the movies I chose to watch were typically sci fi films from the 70s and 80s, I wanted to use a color-palette that reminded me of the artwork I used to see as a kid. Nowadays, science fiction imagery tends to stick to cooler palettes of blacks and blues, but growing up I remember oranges, reds, and even purples.
The visual style of these pages provides a perfect backdrop to an artful linking of science fiction with myth. I find myself wishing I could read the work in full.
(via tcddesign)
1. Good design is innovative
2. Good design makes a product useful
3. Good design is aesthetic
4. Good design helps us to understand a product
5. Good design is unobtrusive
6. Good design is honest
7. Good design is durable
8. Good design is consequent to the last detail
9. Good design is concerned with the environment
10. Good design is as little design as possible
Koldo Barroso. Illustration for Judy Dyble’s album `Talking With Strangers´. Universal Music, 2009.
Hey! This amazing book “Glimpses from the Mummified Wood” from Koldo Barroso is out now! And the good news is that the distributor is running a sale: 25% off until February the 14th!
:D
(Source: susanitaslittlegallery, via thefae)
Parecen comestiblesNicholas Kirkwood for Meadham Kirchhoff
Chacarita Cemetery
Buenos Aires
…
Super Ricohflex
Kodak Tri-X 400 developed Xtol (1:3)
(via zucchero316)
(Source: browndresswithwhitedots)
(Source: andrewharlow)
You had me at Hello World.











