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Midweek Miscellany


Flaunt it — Designer Armin Vit discusses the UnderConsideration book Flaunt: Designing Effective, Compelling and Memorable Portfolios of Creative Work at For Print Only.

How Art Became the Media — Lewis Lapham, editor of Lapham’s Quarterly (formerly editor of Harper’s Magazine), at Guernica magazine (via Bookslut on Twitter):

It isn’t that the country now lacks for painters painting pictures or poets writing poems, nor is it to say that stores of human energy and hope aren’t to be found in the novels of Elmore Leonard or the songs of Bruce Springsteen. It is to say that with the dawn of Reagan’s bright new morning in America, the notion of art as the way into a redemptive future had withered on the vine. Once again, as had been customary throughout most of the country’s history, art was seen as an embodiment of the good, the true, and the beautiful only to the extent that it could be exchanged for money.

George Lois on the iPad in the New York Observer (no, I’m not entirely sure how I missed this last week either):

“magazines will never die because there is a visceral feeling of having that thing in your hands and turning the pages. It’s so different on the screen. It’s the difference between looking at a woman and having sex with her.”

Flying the Coop — Another interesting installment of the National Post‘s ‘Ecology of Books’ series, this time on authors moving from small presses to big publishing. And there’s an interesting follow up from Daniel Wells, the publisher of Biblioasis one of the aforementioned Canadian small/independent presses (via Steven Beattie).

Microdistribution — This is fascinating… The Boulder Bookstore (Colorado) is experimenting with charging self-published authors for shelf-space and promotion (via Sarah Weinman on Twitter):

“Most people will come in at one of the higher fee amounts,” Arsen Kashkashian, the store’s head buyer and the architect of the program, told me. “That surprised us.” In fact, when the store first began charging its consignment authors back in 2007 (the fee-structure idea emerged when the store’s employees found themselves “inundated with self-published books, and there was a lot of work involved and not much reward”), its staff “thought people would grumble and complain” about the charges. But authors, Kashkashian says, have been generally grateful for the opportunity to sell and promote work that might otherwise be seen and appreciated only by their friends/spouses/moms: “‘I want the marketing, I want the exposure. I worked so hard on this project, and you guys are the only ones who could help me with it.’”

And finally…

Four Ways to Combines Fonts by H&FJ, built around a beautifully simple principle: “keep one thing consistent, and let one thing vary.”

2 Comments

  1. Despite the Frengrish (it’s obviously “bonne humeur”, not “bon humeur”, the H&FJ poster is rather impressive. I am not sure I understand what they are varying, and what remains but hopefully I shall understand better from the original post.

    Have you read the Flaunt it book about portfolios? The mixing of font is not entirely successful (they have done a great job in bringing the x-height of the cursive font to match the roman but the contrast between x/h proportions remains a bit clumsy, don’t you think? In any case, I should probably buy this book at some point (namely: when I have money).

    • Dan

      Hey Davidikus: I haven’t read the Flaunt book. As a decidedly non-designer, I would have difficulty justifying buying it! I keep hearing good things about it through the grapevine though…

      The H&FJ poster wasn’t the most extreme example of mixing fonts that they used, but I thought it was a rather elegant one. I hope you’ve had chance to read the whole article.

      Thanks as always for your thoughts. :-)

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