The Avant Garden is a creative carnival launching Cape Town’s young, rising talent. This design expo & after-party catersto all tastes: delectable food, art, photography, an expo filled with creative crafts from furniture to fashion, live and electronic performers, a stocked bar, sponsored prizes & a live fashion showcase.
Come open, inspired & ready to play.
Tickets available at quicket
Monday, 1 September 2014
Tuesday, 1 July 2014
36 FREE font resources
Where are the best places to go to download free fonts? We reveal websites where you can find quality typography that won't cost a penny.
There are plenty of places to download fonts on the web. But which of them contain the best free typefaces? There's a lot of noise and clutter on the web, and it's easy to end up falling down the rabbit hole of poorly structured sites and low quality fonts. So we've taken on ourselves to find you the gems in the rough.
Besides the obvious places to get hold of free fonts, we've also unearthed some less known sources - including personal portfolios, agency sites and type projects. So next time you want to download fonts, start discovering a world of typographical inspiration!
You will have to head here to go grab them...
Thursday, 26 June 2014
South African Brewer Uses Ads to Declare an All-Out War on Hipsters
We've reached peak hipster. And we've also reached peak anti-hipster. But South Africa's Garagista Beer Co. is barging ahead anyway with a campaign that positions the brand as absolutely not the right choice for the coolest people on earth.
Watch below as a bunch of unkempt cool white people battle each other with records, typewriters and bicycles for a taste of the brewery's limited-edition batch of suds. And also check out the onslaught of anti-hipster print ads the brand has put together.
Over at the brand's Facebook page (because having an actual Web page is so January 2014), it's clear that Garagista is pretty normcore about the whole thing. "In a world where some people care more about the craft beer image than the actual beer," it says, "we care about one thing—damn good beer."
Cool. Now, can we make all the selfies go away?
Thanks from adweek. See the TV ad while you there.
Wednesday, 18 June 2014
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Google Ventures On 8 Shortcuts For Better, Faster Design Research
GOOGLE VENTURES'S MICHAEL MARGOLIS IS MORE PRODUCTIVE THAN EVER. HIS SECRET? SHORTCUTS.
I’ve been doing design and UX research for almost 24 years. In that time, I’ve learned a lot, and I hope I’ve gotten better at it over the years.
One thing is certain: I’m more productive now than when I first started. I’m not any smarter (just ask my co-workers). I’m not working more hours. So what’s my secret? Shortcuts. In the interest of helping you do more faster (and to compel you to share your own tricks), here are my favorite ways to cut corners, save time, and be more efficient when doing research.
1. Start at the end: What questions do you want to answer?
Before you do any work on a research study, clarify what you want to get out of it. For example, would it be most useful to figure out:
Before you do any work on a research study, clarify what you want to get out of it. For example, would it be most useful to figure out:
- Can new customers understand and figure out how to use the product?
- What are customers’ existing workflow and pain points?
- What are pros/cons of competitive products?
- What are customers’ attitudes?
- How satisfied are existing customers with the product?
- How does new customers’ usage change over time?
- Which design performs better?
When you know which answers you’re after, it’s quicker to choose the most efficient way to find them--by picking an appropriate research method (survey, A/B test, literature review, usability interviews, site visits, etc.), and the right segment of customers to study.
Read further on the Fast Company website.
Why Drawing On The iPad Just Got Way Better
THANKS TO APPLE UNLOCKING THE IPAD'S POTENTIAL, FIFTYTHREE'S PENCIL WILL SOON GET EVEN BETTER.
Today, the iPad stylus takes another step away from stupid stick and closer to expressive artistic tool. FiftyThree's Pencil--a wooden stylus made for the impressive iPad sketching app Paper--will soon allow you to vary the width of your line as naturally as drawing with a real pencil or marker.
As the video shows, you simply tilt the tip of the Pencil to go from fine point to thick line while sketching on screen--just as you would with the real thing. In other words, digital drawing on the iPad can feel a step more intuitive than it has.
While the Paper app--also developed by FiftyThree--has some incredible algorithms inside that enable intuitive color mixing and for you to rest the palm of your hand on the screen as you draw, this update actually comes largely as courtesy of Apple. Amongst countless updates in iOS 8 is a powerful feature that most of us missed: The iPad’s touchscreen can now recognize objects of various size. So instead of treating a thumb or pinky as the same sized orb, it can accommodate the precision necessary for the Pencil’s tip to begin simulating the multitude of subtle thicknesses we’d find in any natural drawing tool.
If you already own a Pencil, there’s no need to buy anything new. Free software will update the feel of the hardware. Timing will coincide with the public release of iOS 8 in the Fall.
See more here.
Sunday, 18 May 2014
This is What it Sounds Like When You Put Tree Rings on a Record Player
This is an excerpt from the record Years, created by Bartholomäus Traubeck, which features seven recordings from different Austrian trees including Oak, Maple, Walnut, and Beech. What you are hearing is an Ash tree’s year ring data. Every tree sounds vastly unique due to varying characteristics of the rings, such as strength, thickness and rate of growth.
Keep in mind that the tree rings are being translated into the language of music, rather than sounding musical in and of themselves. Traubeck’s one-of-a-kind record player uses a PlayStation Eye Camera and a stepper motor attached to its control arm. It relays the data to a computer with a program called Ableton Live. What you end up with is an incredible piano track, and in the case of the Ash, a very eerie one.
Hats off to Traubeck for coming up with the ingenious method to turn a simple slice of wood into a beautiful unique arraignment. It makes you wonder what types of music other parts of nature would play. (see video below)
Read more at http://www.the-open-mind.com/this-is-what-it-sounds-like-when-you-put-tree-rings-on-a-record-player/#zkhxmMqeF6xRpgRP.99
Monday, 12 May 2014
36 Countries, 600 Days, 125,946 Miles and 1 Perfect Selfie Video
If this doesn't want to make you travel and go and see the world, maybe something else will. Whatever you do just get out there.
Monday, 7 April 2014
Typography in ten minutes
This is a bold claim, but I stand behind it: if you learn and follow these five typography rules, you will be a better typographer than 95% of professional writers and 70% of professional designers. (The rest of this book will raise you to the 99th percentile in both categories.)
Ready? Go.
- The typographic quality of your document is determined largely by how the body text looks. Why? Because there’s more body text than anything else. So start every project by making the body text look good, then worry about the rest.In turn, the appearance of the body text is determined primarily by these four typographic choices:
- point size is the size of the letters. In print, the most comfortable range for body text is 10–12 point. On the web, the range is 15–25 pixels. Not every font appears equally large at a given point size, so be prepared to adjust as necessary.
- line spacing is the vertical distance between lines. It should be 120–145% of the point size. In word processors, use the “Exact” line-spacing option to achieve this. The default single-line option is too tight; the 1½-line option is too loose. In CSS, use
line-height
. - line length is the horizontal width of the text block. Line length should be an average of 45–90 characters per line (use your word-count function) or 2–3 lowercase alphabets, like so:abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdIn a printed document, this usually means page marginslarger than the traditional one inch. On a web page, it usually means not allowing the text to flow to the edges of the browserwindow.
- And finally, font choice. The fastest, easiest, and most visible improvement you can make to your typography is to ignore the fonts that came free with your computer (known as system fonts) and buy a professional font (like my fonts equityand concourse, or others found in font recommendations). A professional font gives you the benefit of a professional designer’s skills without having to hire one.If that’s impossible, you can still make good typography with system fonts. But choose wisely. And never choose times new roman or Arial, as those fonts are favored only by the apathetic and sloppy. Not by typographers. Not by you.
That’s it. As you put these five rules to work, you’ll notice your documents starting to look more like professionally published material.
Keep reading this useful online guide by simply clicking on these three dots...Friday, 4 April 2014
CPUT GD Alumni Featured: Gabrielle Guy
Book design is a kind of art in and of itself, and nowhere more so than in the case of art publication design. Here, the design choices and intricacies of the printing process itself impart meaning and create another experience for the reader between the book they hold in their hands and the artworks themselves.
Get inspired further by clicking on these dots...
Monday, 24 March 2014
Create a Colorful Geometric Pattern in Photoshop
Patterns are a great way to add additional texture and depth to your designs. Some can appear to be fairly complex, and the thought of making one can be overwhelming. You may find, however, that many aren't as difficult to create as they look. In this tutorial, I will show you an easy way to create colorful, and complex-looking geometric patterns in Photoshop.
For Step by Step instructions go here
Thursday, 13 March 2014
Monday, 10 March 2014
A Travel Film Made from 852 Instagram Shots
Thomas Jullien takes us (almost) around the world in this sub 2-minute video stitched together from 852 Instagram shots. Stops include Paris, NYC and Sydney, among others.
It’s incredibly well done and the amount of work involved in just finding these hundreds of similar photos is mind-boggling.
Found here...
Infecting the City - Public Arts festival
Infecting The City 2014 includes 40 distinct artworks, which unfold over the Festival week across Cape Town's CBD. The Programme includes both daytime and evening performances much of which are designed as routes weaving through the City's streets.
10 - 15th March / Cape Town City Center
Sunday, 2 March 2014
Friday, 7 February 2014
Sunday, 26 January 2014
Wednesday, 15 January 2014
Monday, 13 January 2014
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