Archive for the ‘Art and Design’ Category

FOWD: New York 2008

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
My laminate and guide book from FOWD

My laminate and guide book from FOWD

I mentioned in passing about my attending the Future of Web Design conference in New York yesterday. Thought I’d go into a bit more depth about it, seeing as how it was kind of the impetus for my resurgence of creative energy.

Things were held at Roseland Ballroom, which seemed to be a strange choice of venue. One thing for certain was the need for Roseland to get better folding chairs. By the end of the day there were quite a number of people sitting on the floor because of their ass-numbing quality. But aside from the seats, the occasional awkward speaker and the over-exuberant promotion of the after party, it was a day well spent.

Now, for some of the highlights as I saw them:

Dan Mall talked about the “Experience Layer”, which focuses more on designing for content, style, behavior and experience instead of for certain technologies. Other topics touched upon included emotional design and progressive enhancement. In all, this really realigned my view on how I should be approaching my future designs.

Derek Powazek spoke on “Crowdsourcing” (and has posted his slides). The man knows about the habits of communities and was one of the few fine folks I hoped to model my career on when I was still learning the ins and outs, so hearing him speak was a special treat.

But I’d have to say the most influential speaker in my opinion was Mike Kus, who asked the question of “Whatever happened to the art in design?” — something I have been pondering for some time. His hand drawn slides were probably the biggest single impetus in getting me to get the new design online last night.

In the end, all of what I heard reenforced my belief that this is a great time to be a web designer.  Bandwidth and standards compliance have grown and matured to a point where designers should be free to push themselves more readily, and I think the world will be richer for it.

The Flying Fan

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008


This past Sunday, Jill and I went out to MoMA to look around for a bit, starting at the top of the museum and working our way back down to the ground level.  Every so often we would be able to get a glimpse into the large atrium of the Contemporary Gallery where a large electric fan tethered to the ceiling was flying about.

To watch it was to be captivated by its motion, as this rather short video I made shows.  I certainly wasn’t the only one, as every child that walked by had to try to jump and catch it.  At its lowest point it couldn’t have been more than 7 or 8 feet off the ground.

I neglected to find out who the artist is or what this piece is really called.  Bad Andrew.

Song is “Convenience Shopping” by Alan Hawkshaw.

Adding to the Web Designer’s Toolkit

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

For those of you who build pretty looking things in HTML and CSS, this may interest you.

WestCiv added to their their free web dev bookmarklet collection with MRI, a little tool to help you test and play with selectors. This should go along well with their other helpful bookmarklet, XRAY, which is used to see the box model for any element on any web page.

And lest not forget the importance of color scheming here.  In one of the cooler ideas I’ve seen in a while, colr.org takes an image you feed it and gives you an interactive click map of the colors it finds.  Neat!

Breaking designers’ block

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

I’m not about to count the number of time I’ve bemoaned my design process on these pages, but needless to say, it’s been a long running theme with me since the start of my career. While I know that others go through these same thoughts, it’s always better to have some substantial content to hang onto to bolster your reassurance.

So imagine my pleasure when I read this great post by Jason Santa Maria where he not only shares his thoughts, but also points out some possible ways to break the block and keep in touch with the living, breathing essence of the cutting edge. Well, maybe not in those terms exactly, but still well worth a read.

Professional grade links

Monday, September 18th, 2006

I actually managed to fit some web and design related reading into my weekend web browsing. Thought I’d share the cream of the crop — that and linking them here will help me find them later on.