UK from above for BBC by 422

Ad, Design, Geotagging, Statistics, TV show, geoblog, graphic design by Thorsten Meyer No Comments »

BBC Britain seen from the skies above

Quote from 422’s “Britain From Above” web page:

422 create Unique time-lapse views of British life using real GPS data for major new BBC series presented by Andrew Marr. 422 has created ground breaking CGI sequences revealing never seen before patterns of life in modern Britain. Starting with GPS data mapping the movements of London taxi cabs, commercial aircraft, Channel shipping, refuse trucks and schoolchildren, 422 MD and senior programmer Craig Howarth translated lists of raw numeric co-ordinates sampled at regular time intervals, into coherent animated paths. 422’s VFX team, led by Art Director Dave Corfield and VFX supervisor Andy Howell visualised the resulting paths in Maya and composited them with satellite imagery of the UK using Shake. The result is simultaneously beautiful, surprising and informative. “Click either of the images to take a look 422’s at web site and watch their reel.

BBC Britain seen from the skies above

No Tags

New book: Graphic Design: The New Basics

Books, Design, Digital Illustration, Interactive and Web Design, Motion Graphics, Print Design, Statistics, furniture design, graphic design, interior architecture, sound design by Thorsten Meyer No Comments »

Graphic Design  The new Basics

A highly recommended book “Graphic Design The New Basics” written by Ellen Lupton and Jennifer Cole Phillips.

Some “Graphic Design: The New Basics” reviews:

motionographer.com“If you’re at all interested in design education—either as a teacher or as a student—Graphic Design: The New Basics is required reading. Ellen Lupton and Jennifer Cole Phillips have made something more than a mere textbook; they’ve created an authoritative and thorough yet useful and inspiring companion for the successful practice of graphic design. I’m confident that I will happily revisit this book again and again during my never-ending journey as a student and teacher.”

viget.com: “Overall I highly recommend this book as an addition to your personal design library. Whether you are a seasoned design professional or someone just interested in learning more, it serves as a fantastic and succinct resource for the fundamentals of good design. “

nytimesbooks.blogspot.com: “But if you do, check this one out, if only for the fantastically sourced examples”

Ellen Lupton and Jennifer Cole Phillips on their newest book:

Graphic Design: The New Basics, published by Princeton Architectural Press and Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) in Spring 2008, is a guide to basic design principles.We created this book because we didn’t see anything like it available for today’s students and young designers: a concise, visually inspiring guide to two-dimensional design written for today’s world. As educators with decades of combined experience in graduate and undergraduate teaching, we have witnessed the design scene change and change again in response to new technologies. When we were students ourselves in the 1980s, classic books such as Armin Hofmann’s Graphic Design Manual (published in 1965) had begun to lose their relevance within the restless and shifting design world. Postmodernism was on the rise, and abstract design exercises seemed out of
step with the current interest in appropriation and historicism.

During the 1990s, design educators became caught in  the pressure to teach (and learn) software, and many of us struggled to balance the teaching of technical skills with and critical thinking. Form sometimes got lost along the way, as design methodologies moved away from universal visual concepts toward a more anthropological understanding of design as a constantly changing flow of cultural sensibilities.
This book addresses the gap between software and visual thinking. By focusing on form, we have  reembraced the Bauhaus tradition and the pioneering work of the great formal design educators, from Armin Hofmann to some of our own teachers, including Malcolm Grear.
The majority of student work featured here comes  from the course we teach together at MICA, the Graphic Design MFA Studio. Also featured are excercises from a range of undergraduate design courses. A sampling of those exercises are assembled on this site. To complement the student work, the book also presents key examples from contemporary professional practice that demonstrate a variety of experimental,
visually richdesign approaches.
Graphic Design: The New Basics lays out the elements  of a visual language whose forms are employed by individuals, institutions, and locales that are increasingly connected in a global society. We hope the book will inspire more thought and creativity.
—Ellen Lupton and Jennifer Cole Phillips”

You can read the some sample chapter online by selecting one of the chapters below:

front matters

color matterslayers

Time MotionModularity
About the Authors:

Ellen Lupton is Director of the Graphic Design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art, and director of MICA’s Center for Design Studies. She is also curator of contemporary design at Cooper–Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York City. She has curated and authored numerous exhibitions and books, including  Thinking with Type (2004), Skin (2002), National Design Triennial (2000, 2003, 2006), Mixing Messages:  Graphic Design in Contemporary Culture (1996), and Mechanical Brides: Women and Machines from Home to  Office (1993). She is a 2007 recipient of the AIGA Gold Medal for lifetime achievement.

Jennifer Cole Phillips is Associate Director of the Graphic Design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art, and Principal of J. Cole Phillips Design. Before joining MICA, Phillips was a tenured Associate   Professor in the program in Publications Design at University of Baltimore. She has an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design. Her work has been included in the annuals of Graphis Design, Graphis Poster, Print, the Art Director’s Club of Metropolitan Washington and New York, AIGA 50, and ACD100 Show, among  others. She served for eight years on the Board AIGA of Directors for Baltimore.

No Tags

StrongMocha Breaking One Million Hits Mark

Statistics, StrongMocha by Thorsten Meyer 1 Comment »

StrongMocha breaking 1 Million Hits

Today, after 7 Month since StrongMocha went online the StrongMocha web site did pass the One Million Hits bar. Thank you for visiting and coming back in the future.

, , , , , ,

StrongMocha.com Aug 2007 Statistics

Statistics, StrongMocha by Thorsten Meyer No Comments »

StrongMocha has been up for one month now and we got some statistics for you

5500 people did visit StrongMocha.com, who on average stayed 12 min on the site. The complete overview can be found on the Statistics page.

, ,
Theme by N.Design Studio -------- This site was build using 25 queries in 0.591 seconds.
CSS XHTML RSS Entries RSS Comments RSS Log in
Close
E-mail It