Jan
30
Balldroppings in NYStream.
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: Balldroppings in NYStream., ITP 2004 | Comments Off
BalldroppingsPhysical featured in article+video by NYStream.
Jan
30
Balldroppings in NYStream.
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: Balldroppings in NYStream., ITP 2004 | Comments Off
BalldroppingsPhysical featured in article+video by NYStream.
Jan
26
Kenny’s Japan Pictures
Original post by richard ting on Flytip.com - Sneakers & Interactive Media Culture
4:43 am | Categorized: ITP 2002, Sneaker Culture | Comments Off
Check out Kenny’s sneaker purchases from Japan.
Jan
26
Japan Trip and Pickups
Original post by richard ting on Flytip.com - Sneakers & Interactive Media Culture
3:37 am | Categorized: ITP 2002, Sneaker Culture | Comments Off
hi, i just got back from a 2 week trip to japan and picked up a few pairs. take a look.
http://www.pbase.com/image/25498977
i also made a post to niketalk. here’s the thread:
http://pub175.ezboard.com/fniketalkfrm19.showMessage?topicID=26234.topic
Jan
25
The Pomegranate
Original post by Josh Knowles on Auscillate.com // The Josh Knowles Blog
9:18 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off
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Punica granatum.
H.E.B. had a bunch of pomegranates on sale in December so I picked one up out of curiousity. Back at home I jabbed into the rind a few times with a spoon and ended up with the above. It’s a beautiful fruit on the inside — snugly packed with seeds that resembled crosses between alien podlings and blood-red bath beads — and I had a much more enjoyable time pulling apart than I did actually tasting it (not that it tasted bad). Normal people make jellies with pomegranates, I gather. I just picked out and ate a bunch of the tangy podlings raw, making a little bit of a mess in the process.
Now I have a quince in my fridge and I’m holding back on reading anything about it online until I get a chance to play with it myself. What mysteries may be contained within…
Jan
19
Gallery Links for January 2004
Original post by Josh Knowles on Auscillate.com // The Josh Knowles Blog
4:46 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off
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Part of the National Design Museum in Manhattan.
I don’t have much new to say. Sorry about the three-month pause between serious posts. That people kept approaching me at parties wondering what had happened should’ve been some indication that I needed to get my web-based ass back on the train, but so it goes. Since I’m a “professional” I get cranky with myself when my own site looks like shit, so over the winter break I rewrote my blogging code once more and redesigned the site. Today I’m happy with it, but we’ll see how this one weathers the long haul…
I’ll kick this version off, as seems to be the tradition, with design links — a list of a few sites I’ve been poking around lately for inspiration. Though they’re a bit random, think of them as my Gallery Links for January 2004. Maybe in the future I’ll get more formal and try to post more tightly “curated” selections of links. Hell, my bookmarks folder is monstrous.
Anyway, posting a photograph I took of the National Design Museum, which I visited last fall, seemed relevant. Their National Design Triennial will be up for one more week, and if you live in the area I’d recommend checking that out.
So. We’re off.
Typography
Good fonts are really compelling. Sucks that I can’t use any more interesting fonts that Georgia or Verdana for my sites, but I still enjoy keeping an eye on what’s going on in foundryland. I don’t buy fonts, but the foundries often give away a few of their fonts for free and just picking these up when you find them can help you build up quite a collection.
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Typographi.ca - Simple, but they provide some good links and a squirt of opinion.
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Typophile - Though the useless Flash tomfoolery irks me, their Found Type gallery is fun to look through. It’s also one of those web things that’s cool and simple enough in concept to inspire new ideas…
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Identifont - This is a genius tool and I have used it on numerous occasions when I need to ID a font.
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Letter Labor - A quick, cool animated explanation of the patterns used to create a font. I’d recommend taking their advice and picking up a copy of the Unibody™ pixel font, as well.
Blog Design
I wanted to balance a professional look with a personal one for this site and I looked to a handful of sites which, I thought, did this nicely. What these people had to say interested me less than how they said it (not that they don’t say good things).
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Brookelyn - She’s got a really sexy site and I used her color palette as the starting point to develop the palette currently used on Auscillate. She does a good job balancing the bold and the soft and the photos are really lovely. The body fonts would cause a usability guy to whine, being white text on a light tan background — but whatever. Anyway, the sad fact of the matter is that her page looks much better than mine. Dammit.
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Fireland - Another Josh. I like the book-like simplicity and the subtle colors. The bright blue-red-white-black look has worn seriously thin for me, and if I had to make a web design prediction for the coming couple of years it would be that color choice will take a turn towards the earth-toned and designers will learn to better balance rich colors with softer ones and explore outside the traditional 216.
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Squidfingers - This guy has an attractive site, as well, but his patterns really take the prize. I remember back to the dark ages of web design — back in 1997 when pages existed that featured collections of gaudy background patterns you could use to tile behind your webpages, rendering them mostly unreadable. Squidfingers takes that concept and usefully modernizes it to the modern web. And if you surf around a bit, you’ll start noticing sites that use his patterns all over the place…
Art
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Dream Dollars - Local currency from Antarctica, these look gorgeous and have a whole backstory to them about the lost colony of Nadiria.
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Flight404 - A surreal blog-as-fiction piece about the lost flight 404.
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Eboy - Pixel-art that you’ve probably seen before. I get into the little city scenes and I’d be tempted to buy the book if they didn’t have so much on their site.
So there you go. Enjoy. And I’ve got more coming soon, I swear.
Oh, also: If you have an opinion about the way this site now look (or if you notice something going wrong in your browser), post a comment. I’d like to hear it.
Jan
18
A look into Prohibit NYC
Original post by richard ting on Flytip.com - Sneakers & Interactive Media Culture
12:17 am | Categorized: ITP 2002, Sneaker Culture | Comments Off
Check out the kicks available at Prohibit NYC
Prohibit is located at 269 Elizabeth Street in NYC, NY
Jan
16
Balldroppings Physical in New York!
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: Balldroppings Physical in New York!, ITP 2004 | Comments Off
Balldroppings and MiniPong shown at TKNY event, Compact Impact.
Jan
16
Physical BallDroppings in New York
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: ITP 2004, Physical BallDroppings in New York | Comments Off
"custom Balldroppings" at TKNY’s Compact-Impact show. Using a camera for input, visitors were able to move real, physical wooden
sticks around on a table. The balls were projected down from the ceiling. New York, NY
Jan
16
Physical BallDroppings in New York
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: ITP 2004, Physical BallDroppings in New York | Comments Off
"custom Balldroppings" at TKNY’s Compact-Impact show. Using a camera for input, visitors were able to move real, physical wooden
sticks around on a table. The balls were projected down from the ceiling. New York, NY
Jan
16
Balldroppings Physical in New York!
Original post by Josh Nimoy on jtnimoy.net
3:00 am | Categorized: Balldroppings Physical in New York!, ITP 2004 | Comments Off
Balldroppings and MiniPong shown at TKNY event, Compact Impact.