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Monthly Archives: May 2009

WE LOVE BAD WEATHER

My husband always seems to come up with great ideas for new applications. He rarely has time to pursue them, so over Memorial Day weekend when we had a little extra time to “geek-out” he wrote a Twitter application that notifies followers of bad weather in their area. Being the other half of the developer/designer duo, I had the priveledge of coming up with the design.

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No one likes to be caught in bad weather without warning, so we decided to help prevent that from happening to you. Badwthr is dedicated to providing followers with the most recent weather updates for their zip code. All of the information is taken directly from the National Weather Service so you know it is legitimate. Best of all, Badwthr will only send you messages relevant to your zip code so you don’t have to worry about being slammed with unnecessary notifications.

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Just find us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/badwthr and click follow. We’ll send a direct message with instructions from there.

May 30, 2009 // 1 Comment

MAKES ME WANT TO HAVE MY WEDDING OVER

You know when you see something that just makes you want to go back and redo an experience you’ve already had? That is exactly what went through my mind when I saw the invitations designed by Matthew Muller for his own wedding on the Behance network.

The invites are actually 6×9″ hand-sewn, 14 pages booklets that appear to catalog the couples experiences together.

Drool.

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May 25, 2009 // 1 Comment

10 PRINCIPLES THAT WILL MAKE YOUR WORK BETTER OR MAY MAKE IT WORSE

I recently found a subscribed to the blog of the one and only brilliant Frank Chimero. Buried in February of 2009 was an interesting article Frank wrote for Antonio Carusone. It holds some great information and I encourage anyone (creative or not) to read it.

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I hate the word “tip.” It implies that there’s something that you don’t know. Some secret little gem that, when sprinkled on your work, your creative process, your diet, or your sex life will magically make it all better. They promise to make all of it effervescent, and float above everything, defying gravity above all those poor folks who didn’t happen to stumble upon Dumbo’s magic feather like you did.

Tips are easy. And shallow. Principles, though, now that’s something worth talking about. If tips are puddles, principles can be oceans. They can be deep enough to hold intrepid adventures, yet tame enough to provide a significant bounty to nourish a creative life. They can serve as a north star and a rallying point. More than anything, they can be an inspiration. Sailors will always sing about the sea.

Antonio asked me to map my own ocean and to document a few of my guiding principles. They may be of assistance to you. They may not. But then again, it’d be a shame if we were all working off the same map, looking for the same treasure.

1. Be honest.
Be honest to your audience. An open path of communication is built upon trust. This idea is relevant to every other form of communication, and I think it applies to visual communication. Honesty isn’t just about audience. Be honest to yourself as well. Do the things you’re passionate about. Avoid the things that you hate, if you can.

2. Consistent voice is more important than consistent style.
Voice is about what you say. It’s content. Style is about what you’re wearing. It’s aesthetics. The prior informs the latter, not the other way around. Clothes don’t make the man. They don’t make your work either.

3. Does it have heart?
If it does, make it. If it doesn’t, why spend the time on something that doesn’t have spirit?

4. Have modest expectations.
Spend a lot of time choosing that one thing that a piece of design or an illustration should try to do. Then, work your ass off trying to figure out the absolute best way to do that one thing.

5. Don’t be scared of your tools.
Use them, don’t fear them. For instance, while sketching, I recommend using cheap paper. If the paper’s cheap, you won’t feel bad documenting your bad ideas. Getting the first, awful ideas out of the way is crucial: very rarely does any one hit it out of the park on the first try. If I had a sketchbook filled with nice, expensive paper, I’d feel obligated to make the first idea I sketched brilliant. That pressure would paralyze me. Tools should be enablers, not disablers. If something is more intrusive or intimidating than it is useful, get rid of it. It’s not a tool, it’s a toy. Or worse, a creative boogie man that you’re inviting through your front door.

6. Embrace the subconscious.
In the studio, I have a sofa for naps with a couple pillows. The pillow is kind of comfortable, but mostly not. Just soft enough to relax you. But, just stiff enough to keep you from falling fully asleep. Right before you fall fully asleep, your brain is making all sorts of connections between all of the unrelated thoughts in your brain. There’s no filter from your conscious mind saying “This makes sense. This other idea doesn’t.” Without that filter, you can consider more possibilities. So, grab something to write with, fill your head to the brim with research and what you already know. Then, take an almost-nap and get ready to document the ideas that find you.

7. Edit.
Delete unimportant things. Even if you love them. If it isn’t spectacular, it gets cut. Kill your darlings. Be a cold-blooded killer. Ruthless. Delete. Refine. Improve
8. Being too comfortable is dangerous.
Most creatures die in their sleep. Keep moving, or get eaten. The only things you should be absolutely comfortable with in your creative process are your tools.

9. There is nothing keeping you from doing the sort of work that you wish.
What do you want? It’s a hard, yet crucial question. We all do creative work to get happy. It’s why we let it beat us up, and it’s why we keep crawling back to it. Figure out precisely what you want, and realize that if no one will pay you to make it, you can still make it for yourself. And you still win, because you’re happy.

10. Execute.
An idea on the page is worth 100x more than an idea in the mind. You can only judge and be judged by work that’s executed. Eventually, we all realize that most of the ideas that look great in our mind look dumb once they’re real. But, at least you now know.

May 25, 2009 // 0 Comments

HAPPY MAY DAY

Ever since I can remember, my family has celebrated May Day to it’s fullest.

For those of you who aren’t familiar with May Day, May Day was celebrated by some early European settlers of the American continent. In some parts of the United States, May Baskets are made. These baskets are small and usually filled with flowers or treats and left at someone’s doorstep. The basket giver would ring the bell and run away. The person receiving the basket would try to catch the fleeing giver. If they caught the person, a kiss was to be exchanged.

When I was in Kansas, we would devise elaborate plans for getting the May Day baskets to our cousins without getting caught. Sadly, I have yet to find anyone in Indiana who celebrates this holiday. One of these days, I’ll make it a tradition. Yes….I will.

May 1, 2009 // 4 Comments