Substance & Style

Buy this book! Ryan Hembree, founder of Indicia Design in Kansas City, has just released a great book: The Complete Graphic Designer, A Guide to Understanding Graphics and Visual Communication.

Unlike the bulk of graphic design books on the market today, Ryan’s book offers substance — covering everthing from process to layout to branding — and style — it’s packed with oodles of examples from notable designers.

Tinspiration

Fossil is running a tin design contest. Top prize is $1,000 bucks, a tin featuring your design (duh), and best of all (IMHO), a trip to their design studio in Dallas.

They started the contest in June and it looks like they have a paucity of entries (and even fewer quality submissions). So you have until September 12 to get your design on and have good odds on some good loot.

On ideas

So I was having a conversation at work today about how creative folks always have big ideas rattling around in our heads. In some cases, we’re fortunate enough to have the skills and/or time to act on those ideas.

It made me think of a quote I ran across the other day:

“Exhilaration is that feeling you get just after a great idea hits you and just before you realise what’s wrong with it.” — Anonymous

It’s really easy to kill any idea (good or bad) by looking for shortcomings:

“This ‘telephone’ has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.” –Western Union internal memo, 1876.

Sometimes it’s best to ignore the naysayers, overlook the obstacles, and act on your ideas. Dammit.

Those quotes and many more can be found here.

Urban Photo Safari

If you own a digital camera, live anywhere near Kansas City, and have a little free time this weekend, be sure to check out the 4th annual Urban Photo Safari.

You can find all of the important details here, but here’s the elevator pitch for the impatient: you’re given four hours and a geographic boundary to shoot as many pics as your memory card can hold. Your 10 favorite pics are posted on the Urban Photo Safari website. Once everyone’s photos are posted, you look them over and vote for the 10 best. The photo that gets the most votes wins.

I’ve done it twice now and I’m hooked. It’s a great way to stretch your creative muscles, meet some cool people and see a lot of great photos.