weblog content varies
This is where I keep things I find.
It's a journal about the creative act and the creative artifact.

In a flood of digital debris, this is a way of saving and cataloging the images, sounds, videos, words, and ideas that I find most inspiring. With this filtered survey of architecture, art, and design media, my goal is to bring to light projects and clips that might encourage critical discussion with friends. Thanks for looking.

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Matt Siber cleverly removes traditional written language from his photographs, allowing a purely graphic city to speak for itself.

From the artist’s statement:

“The Untitled Project” is rooted in an underlying interest in the nature of power. With the removal of all traces of text from the photographs, the project explores the manifestation of power between large groups of people in the form of public and semi-public language. The absence of the printed word not only draws attention to the role text plays in the modern landscape but also simultaneously emphasizes alternative forms of communication such as symbols, colors, architecture and corporate branding. In doing this, it serves to point out the growing number of ways in which public voices communicate without using traditional forms of written language.

The reintroduction of the text takes written language out of the context of its intended viewing environment. The composition of the layouts remain true to the composition of their corresponding photographs in order to draw attention to relative size, location and orientation. The isolation of the text from its original graphic design and accompanying logos, photographs and icons helps to further explore the nature of communication in the urban landscape as a combination of visual and literal signifiers.
while i’m on the subject of typography,
here’s a video of the quick brown fox jumping over the lazy dog. 

so priceless.

LAIKA, a dynamic typeface based on multiple levels of user interaction.

created for a thesis at Hochschule der Künste Bern, 2009. the creators Michael Flückiger and Nicolas Kunz say this:

“for our bachelor thesis, we engaged ourselfs with dynamic typography, especially with dynamic typefaces. since not much work has been done in this field, we devised a system in which a typeface would not be defined static fonty styles anymore but would be able to change it‘s shape and appearance at any moment reacting to a broad spectrum of inputs.”

more info, and a little playground here: laikafont.ch