The Line by Saul Steinberg

The Line, the original a 10-meter-long drawing with 29 panels that unfold, accordion fashion, is Steinberg’s manifesto about the conceptual possibilities of the line and the artist who gives them life. His drawing hand begins and ends the sequence, as the simple horizontal line that hand creates metamorphoses into, among other things, a water line, laundry line, railroad track, sidewalk, arithmetic division line, or table edge; near the end, the curlicues etched by the iceskater’s blade remind us of the role calligraphy plays in Steinberg’s art.

The Line by Saul Steinberg

Animal Tail Magnets

I can’t help but think that these animals are checking out what’s in my fridge. Animal Tail Magnets.

Ghost Towel

Do you have little ones? In that case this Ghost Towel will most certainly make you smile.

(via CSYCB)

Jessi Arrington’s Rainbow Parade

(Images by DumboNYC on Flickr)

Last saturday my studiomate Jessi pulled off an absolutely magical rainbow parade as part of a fleamarket-good-cause-sale-birthday-celebration called HoleSale. We’ll have a movie and more photos eventually, I just quickly wanted to share first impressions!

Hand-Drawn Icon Set

I posted the pixel perfect Helveticons earlier. Now, here’s something for those of you being more into hand-drawn icons.

(thank you spencer)

Switzerland — more than just mountains

Made me smile.

Afternoon Drunk

The idea behind the Phraseology Project is quite simple and wonderful: You submit a letter, word or phrase and they’ll make it look beautiful with type. Please be sure your word or phrase is under 20 characters. (My 5year old would love that typeface)

(Thank you Patrick O’Dell)

The Stars on Facebook

Altoids “Curiously Strong Awards” from Marc Ritzema on Vimeo.

This made me laugh, and, I want that Pixel Camera!

(via Larry who pointed me to devour)

Helveticons

Helveticons are Royalty-free vector icons, glyphs and symbols based on the Helvetica Bold typeface.

(thank you marco)

Cirque Anime

I just discovered this vintage Circus Animation book thanks to my studiomate Raul. Here’s the link to the post over on Agence Eureka.

Journal Bandolier

This is nifty: A leather strap fitted with small loops for carrying pens, pencils, and other handy tools wrapped around a journal.

Back of a Web Page

Here’s a site that made me chuckle: BackOfAWebPage.tumblr.com features hypothetical illustrations of what the back of some iconic Web sites might look like if they did indeed have a back.

(via khoi)

♥ / Jetsetter iPad App

A big thank you to Jetsetter for sponsoring this week’s RSS Feed.

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(Interested in sponsoring a week of my RSS feed, learn more here.)

Event Sponsorship Done Differently

At every CreativeMornings I thank our sponsors while showing a slide. Mailchimp has been our NYC main sponsor for over a year now and it became a struggle to keep it fresh.

When I had Milton Glaser lined up to speak in january, I reached out to the fantastic folks at Mailchimp and asked them if they would be up for doing a custom slide dedicated to Milton, given his massive-crazy-rockstar status in the design world. Within minutes I saw a “YES! YES! YES!” in my inbox. Here’s what they sent:

Needless to say it got a big laugh. What I thought would just be a one-time-deal has now turned into one of my biggest highlights of every CreativeMornings. Four slides in, I can safely say Mailchimp has created a new way of doing event sponsorships. I have gotten comments this morning of attendees that they can’t wait to see what Mailchimp came up this time. Hat tip goes off to Aaron Robbs and his team for putting so much love into these and showing so much excitement for the idea. For those of you that read my blog it’s quite obvious that I am a big fan of Mailchimp. I find it wonderful that the founder, Ben Chestnut, let’s his designers experiment and spend a significant amount of time on these custom slides. Some people might argue it’s a waste of money and that there’s no real ROI… (yawn).

I strongly believe that by turning event sponsorship into something people look forward to see, injecting it with humor and good design, while not actually talking about your services and offerings, is the new way to go. Get people excited about your company and overall philosophy and the rest will follow. After all they managed to turn sending newsletters into something I truly enjoy. Just take their site: It’s beautifully designed and greets you with humor every time you log in. My favorite part is where the chimp talks to you and say’s things like: “Tina, aren’t you a breath of fresh air?”

Here’s what Aaron Robbs said on the process of coming up with these slides:

Playing on work these speakers have already done would be an easy route–but I look for something less obvious to latch on to. Christoph Niemann had a blog entry illustrating his history with coffee, and I finally thought to myself, “There must be magical juice in his latte.” But I probably wouldn’t have gotten to that moment without pouring over his work, going to craft stores, painting eggs and making fruit out of Play Doh first.

MailChimp really gets behind creative thinking, and they put a lot of trust in the people they hire to do a great job. So it’s really rewarding to be able to fully explore an idea and know that everyone is going to get behind it….even if it’s weird. And since all of my design work is for MailChimp these days, it’s nice to think of these speakers as new design clients. These slides keep me sharp. And they’re super fun.

Here’s the rest of the slides: Debbie Millman:

Ji Lee, of Google Labs spoke in March:

And just this morning, we had Berlin based Christoph Niemann speak. I nearly fell off my chair laughing when I saw this slide last night:

I hope that Mailchimp’s unusual approach to event sponsorship will have a ripple effect and that we will see more companies dare to experiment. As Christoph Niemann said in his talk this morning: “In order to have creativity, you have to allow for dead ends to happen.” Mailchimp is leading by example.

(And no, Mailchimp did not pay me for this post!)

On Creativity:

“Creativity is like chasing chickens.”

– Christoph Niemann, at CreativeMornings

Tax Receipt

Live in the US? Ever wonder what your taxes are spent on, exactly? The US government set up a site that gives citizens an individual, detailed tax receipt. Wow!

whitehouse.gov/taxreceipt

(Via davidbauer)

Christoph Niemann on Creativity:

“In order to have creativity, you have to allow for dead ends to happen.”

– Christoph Niemann, at CreativeMornings

Jesse Draxler

Discovered this fascinating collage work by Jesse Draxler over at Ignant.

Typeplaces

The Typeplace iphone app let’s you geotag your favorite tpography.

(via Amrit)

Old Typewriter, by Todd McLellan

Lovely 20×200 print today: Old Typewriter, by Todd McLellan.

Leather King

Interesting short about Mitch Alfus also known as the Leather King. What a character!

Directed by The Selby.

Stunning Bookshelf (shot by Selby)

Karl Lagerfeld’s bookshelf system is crazy impressive (and big!) It’s an older shot by Selby, who just came out with Edible Selby.

(via Raul)

Perch Bunk Bed by Oeuf

This new bunk bed by Oeuf is a beauty. I never thought I’d say that about a bunk bed. Really.

iPad Dry Erase Board

Do you design iPad apps? Then you’ll love DesignCommission’s iPad Dry Erase Board.