Making the Penguin Mini Modern Classics
As a lover of literature and design have quite a crush on Penguin Modern Classics. They have led the vanguard of book design and publishing. They have a great series on their site about their new Mini Modern Classics Series. You can get a real behind the scenes look at all aspects of publishing in the series. After you are done, make sure you go and read some of these great works, happy reading!
Part One: Road Test
Part Two: Origins
Part Three: Copy Editing
Part Four: Picture Research
Part Five: Copy Writing
A Funny Chip Kidd Video
I knew Chip Kidd was a great designer and writer, however I was pleasantly amused to find out that he is also a very accomplished, if surreal impressionist. This is a really funny take on the difference between form and content, and how playing with one effects the other. Which is an important theme of his second novel The Learners.
More about Chip Kidd
Design Something Every Day 29/365
For this entry into my Design Something Every Day project I created a digital doodle for one of the greatest books of the 20th Century, William Golding’s Lord of the Flies. The book pulls back the curtain of civilized society and explores the darker superstitious and bestial side of human nature. It is truly a must read.
Lord of the Flies has had a very deep influence on the culture, with references and allusions in works as diverse as LOST, Survivor, the Simpson’s. Two major film versions of the book have been produced, the fair Harry Hook 1990 version and the far superior 1963 Peter Brook classic. You can watch the Brook’s film on YouTube, if you haven’t seen this disturbing film, please do, it is well worth it.
More Faux-Nostalgia
It is very fitting that I saw an article on Boing Boing about a new issue of Steampunk Magazine being released after my last post on the work of Bruce McCall. Nothing says Faux-Nostalgia like Steam Punk; that is the achingly sentimental yearning for a future that never happened. In case you don’t know Steampunk is a genre where modern inventions like computers and the information age happened in the age of Steam, during the height of the Industrial Revolution. Check it out, it’s a really great magazine.

London Rooftops, by Raphael-Lacoste
This is a genre that I have liked, mainly because Victorian London is such a rich place for the modern imagination to play. From Marry Poppins to From Hell the place is a fascinating place. Coal darkened skies cast long shadows on cobble stone streets lit by flickering gaslight. Every twist in the street could lead to a knife wielding barber or into the comforting embrace of the Dawes, Tomes, Mousely, Grubbs, Fidelity Fiduciary Bank, only Tuppence required as entry.
In my imagination Victorian London is a place of squalor on one side and great wealth and absurd tradition on the other. A place on the cusp of modernity, where aristocrats and plutocrats ruled over squalid slums. Not in excessive greed, more with excessive pomp and a certitude of their own righteousness. A time that seemed the sun would never set on the British Empire, then the trenches, artillery and machine guns of Verdun wiped that world away in one fell swoop. It was a tragic period in many ways, as the immortal works of Dickens and Shaw remind us, the distance between us and then is long enough for a bit of romanticism to flourish. And you can read more of that in Steampunk.
Recent Posts
My Twitter Feed
- Communication and Graphics Daily is out! http://t.co/ThLZdYcD ▸ Top stories today via @adamhaider @pjdigitaldesign @residencehouse 5 hrs ago
- Photo: hollyhocksandtulips: http://t.co/mTDtfWm2 5 hrs ago
- Cool Disneyland posters and merc. Nice designs http://t.co/odEMcJqC 6 hrs ago
- More updates...
Posting tweet...
Powered by Twitter Tools








