Archive

Archive for February, 2010

Tiny World

February 28th, 2010 andrew No comments

Videographer Mirko Faienza Discovers “a whole tiny world in my father’s small garden.
there is a small pond with small falls, some stones, some plants, and plenty of life!”

Categories: Video, misc. Tags:

INK.

February 23rd, 2010 andrew No comments

"Stress Relief" - ink on paper

Inspiration is a fickle thing. Sometimes you search for it, but can’t find it. Sometimes it finds you, when you’re not even looking. For the first time in a long time, things have slowed down enough for me to let inspiration tap me on the shoulder and say hello. I’m looking forward to seeing how this affects my professional work.

Categories: design, happenings Tags:

Comic Relief: The Creative Process

February 22nd, 2010 andrew No comments

Every creative professional can relate to this on some level.

Categories: design, funny Tags:

The world is getting noisier

February 5th, 2010 andrew No comments
Baseball in the 1980's vs 2010

Baseball in the 1980's vs 2010

What’s the difference?

- 1980: Baseball game
- 2010: Baseball game, scrolling banner, team branding, teams, score, inning, count, out(s), runners-on, MLB branding, broadcasting network and series standings.

The broadcast may be in HD and the instant replay’s may be better than ever but baseball, like other sports, is not getting easier to watch. In fact, baseball is focused more than ever on taking your attention away from the game. Just take a look at the difference (above). What used to be a baseball field has become a billboard. What used to be served up by commentary is now handled by a persistent heads-up display. Leaving the door open for guys like Joe Buck to somehow end up announcing the World Series.

I remember when I was 9 years old, I had a subscription to Sports Illustrated for Kids. There was a cartoon that depicted $100 hot dogs in addition to athletes and their field of play covered head-to-toe in sponsors. It looks like that cartoon wasn’t too far-fetched. Sadly, this makes the sports we love harder to watch. Here’s hoping for a renaissance in broadcast design.

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