Totally entertaining: Vintage Ad Browser. Boy, times sure have changed.
(via @smashingmag)
Today begins Authentic Job’s annual New Year’s Promotion, but this year is different. They’re calling it the Twenty Ten promotion. It works like this: Post a listing between now and January 22 and you’ll receive 20% off your listing. More importantly, 10% of your purchase will be donated to Charity:Water to help bring clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations.
I am part of Authentic Jobs (see listings on the left side of my blog), so you can use the swissmiss promo code SWISSTEN.
You may also join in and donate to the Authentic Job campaign independent of posting a listing. They are hoping to raise $5,000, which is enough to fund the development of a freshwater well in one village.
Here’s to a fantastic (and cleaner) 2010.
(Coincidentally, Charity:Water is seeking a Web Designer / Front-end Developer in New York City.)
Hanger Tea by Soon Mo Kang. I agree with NarryLikes : Design that makes you smile and most likely drink more tea.
In Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual Michael Pollan offers an indispensible guide for anyone concerned about health and food. Simple, sensible, and easy to use, Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual is a set of memorable rules for eating wisely, many drawn from a variety of ethnic or cultural traditions. Whether at the supermarket or an all-you-can-eat-buffet, this handy, pocket-size resource is the perfect guide for anyone who would like to become more mindful of the food we eat. A pocket compendium of food wisdom-from the author of The The Omnivore’s Dilemma and In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto.
Read an article about the guide over at the HuffingtonPost. Or enjoy an interview on Jon Stewart’s Daily show:
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
Michael Pollan | ||||
|
Christmas Tree: Beautiful in the living room, Glorious in the street, a photo project by Gabriel Mauron. This is exactly why I am not getting a real christmas tree over the holidays. How do you explain the dumping on the street to a little one?
The Baleine bookmark by Atypyk.
The Foodpod is a modern silicone cooking tool designed to save time when boiling, blanching or steaming by conveniently containing, removing and draining foods like eggs, veggies, shellfish and more in one easy-to-use vessel. Saves time and water when preparing a meal, keeps foods together for easy removal and even cooking and acts as a strainer, reserving the cooking liquid. Easily holds up to a dozen large eggs or several heads of broccoli. Built-in grip clip allows for convenient removal from water. Simply place foods in the Foodpod and put in water to cook. Lift from water, let drain. Remove and enjoy!
New York is the city where the future comes to rehearse.
—New York City Mayor Ed Koch at his third inaugural address, January 1, 1986
(via bobulate)
Smashing Magazine compiled 25 User Experience Videos That Are Worth Your Time
SIMON EVANS
Everything I Have, 2008
Pen, paper, scotch tape, white out
60 1/4 X 40 1/8 inches
(via butdoesitfloat)
SiteInspire.net is one of these sites I wish I would have come across a long time ago. What an amazing resource of design inspiration. Browse 1,414 websites by style, theme, and type, or view a random selection. Hat tip off to kulör, a London-based digital design, strategy, and development agency.
GOOD asked some of the world’s most prominent futurists to explain why slowness might be as important to the future as speed: Hurry Up and Wait by Julian Bleecker
Doormat scale that measures your guests weight.
Two days ago I put out this tweet asking for Letterpress studio recommendations:
A lot of my twitter followers asked to share the responses I got. So here they are. Feel free to add more in comments below.
Studio On Fire, Minneapolis
The Mandate Press
Skylab Letterpress, Kansas City
Earl Kallemeyn, Brooklyn
Coeur Noir, Brooklyn
The Mandate Press, Salt Lake City
LetterPressLove, South Dakota
Brown Parcel Press, Athens and Brooklyn
Peter Kruty, Brooklyn
Gilah Press, Baltimore
Letterpress, Austin Texas
Cranky Pressman, Salem OH
Sideshowpress, Charleston South Carolina
Lead Graffiti, Newark Delaware
EM Letterpress, New Bedford MA
Precious Bugarin
Wolfe Editions, Portland Maine
Black Stone Press, Vancouver
Boxcar Press, Syracuse
Bowe House Press, Richmond VA
Pointed Press, Swarthmore PA
Two Paperdolls, Wayne PA
Kyle Van Horn, Baltimore
Cinnamon Kiss Paper Studio
Moontree Letterpress, Brooklyn
Haven Press Studio
Mamas Sauce
Clean Wash Letterpress
Lucky Duck Press
night lights from thesystemis on Vimeo.
In this installation YesYesNo teamed up with The Church, Inside Out Productions and Electric Canvas to turn the Auckland Ferry Building into an interactive playground. Their job was to create an installation that would go beyond merely projection on buildings and allow viewers to become performers, by taking their body movements and amplifying them 5 stories tall.
They used 3 different types of interaction – body interaction on the two stages, hand interaction above a light table, and phone interaction with the tracking of waving phones. There were 6 scenes, cycled every hour for the public.
Credits:
Interaction Design and Software:
YesYesNo — Joel Gethin Lewis, Zach Lieberman, Pete Hellicar, Kyle McDonald, Todd Vanderlin w/ Daito Manabe sound design
(thank you Zach)
Silver (!) Kids Retro Bouncy Hopper.
How comfy does this Baby Barolo Sleeping Bag look? (Only 6-7 more weeks until swissmister will be keeping me busy day and night. Yes, I am finally coming out of my denial and am getting the necessary items for the little man. No, this sleeping bag is not part of it, but one can always look. It sure looks cozy.)
For Improv Everywhere’s latest mission, a 13-member handbell choir provided some unexpected accompaniment for a Salvation Army bell ringer on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. Enjoy the video first and then go behind the scenes with their report. Made me smile.
The Mini Car Company made it look as if their small cars were delivered in a cardboard box, like a fridge or tv. After the holidays, these boxes were put out on the street to get picked up by garbage men. Made me smile.
(via creativecriminals)
Many of my readers keep asking me about the screensaver on my monitor on my about page. It’s the Flip Clock from 9031.com, which unfortunately doesn’t work in Snow Leopard. One of my readers, Richard Skinner, pointed me to who went ahead and built the same Screensaver but for Snow Leopard. Yay!
(thanks richard)