Also love the logo for antler & co.
Well played.
Also love the logo for antler & co.
Well played.
Smart, thought provoking, and all one color. This is when I love graphic design.
via: Hello You Creatives
An absolute visual stunner: The Gettysburg Address, illustrated. Don’t miss it.
(Thanks babe.)
Oh, you tricky Japanese! Banana juice, designed by Naoto Fukasaw
via: omochiwokudasai
(Source: , via crowtendr)
Love the simplicity of this poster.
(via typographie)
Another thing they don’t teach you in design school is what you get paid for. Right alongside the blog complaint that “any design student could do a better job” is the comment that the designer at hand got “hundreds of thousands of dollars to design that logo that could have been better designed by a design student.”
I never knew a designer that got hundreds of thousands of dollars to design a logo. Mostly, designers get paid to negotiate the difficult terrain of individual egos, expectations, tastes, and aspirations of various individuals in an organization or corporation, against business needs, and constraints of the marketplace.
Nice identity and promo package for nonprofit group Ladder Up by Nicole Ziegler. See more at design work life
These Vintage Tokyo subway manner posters used between 1976 and 1982 are in equal parts hilarious, beautiful, and bewildering. Checkout the rest at Pink Tentacle.
Not sure what this is, but I like it.
via: brokennecks
Hooray for family pride! Angela Hardison’s family t-shirts are clever, cute, and most importantly, not embarrassing.
via: Oh Happy Day
This world map, a print based on an original Famille Summerbelle hand papercut, would be an amazing centerpiece in a kids room or nursery. Love it.
via: A Cup of Jo
Really smart shoebox design by Fuse Project for Puma - uses 65% less cardboard, no tissue, and can be re-used. That’s what I like to see.
Via: Design Vagabond
Sweetest little honey jar. The logo and tag are a little too sweet for me, but I do love that little bee-jar.
Via: Design Vagabond
Tom, of the awesome blog Archival Clothing has put together this strange and wonderful Flickr set of vintage garment tags. You never know when this could come in handy.
test