Archive for August, 2009

More…Time Goes By…

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

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DUBLIN 1980 – As requested we have uploaded more images from our “Time Gone By” series. As we scan in the negatives we are discovering a lost world. I remember taking most of the images and some of the comments or at least the mood as I captured the image. People were always friendly, many joked about being photographed while some told a joke, others were unaware and the kids were always curious and wide-eyed at becoming part of something. This Dublin could be grey and overcast but it overflowed with color from the people that called it home. See more here.

Maybe you can’t judge a book by its cover

Friday, August 21st, 2009

richard_lanham_style1Shown here is a recent book cover we designed for Paul Dry Books in Philadelphia. “Style an Anti-Textbook,” by Richard Lanham is a book that regards writing as “pleasure rather than duty.” It’s basically an antidote to your typical, boring classroom book on how to write “well.” We thought that this “revolutionary” approach to writing lent itself to this typographic treatment inspired, of course, by Russian Constructivism. But I guess, having the title and this typographic, constructivist inspired cover, could also mean that it’s meaning and the book’s content, could also be read in different ways, depending on your perspective. And so it was that the esteemed San Francisco Museum of Modern Art snapped up 60 copies of the book for their in-house museum store, figuring that the book was of course about design, not writing. However, on closer inspection of the cover, they were surprised to see that that book had nothing to do with design, or constructivism, but rather writing and the teaching of writing. Maybe the old axiom of not judging a book by its cover remains true but it also makes me wonder how much text people actually read on a cover?

Sadly, SFMOMA returned all the copies. I suppose it goes to show, that you truly cannot judge a book by its cover, especially if you don’t read all the copy.