Penguin: The covers
Check out Joe Kral’s Flickr collection of some of Penguin (and Pelican)’s best cover designs.
And . . . check out Phil Baine’s Penguin by Design: A Cover Story 1935-2005.
Found via LifeClever
Check out Joe Kral’s Flickr collection of some of Penguin (and Pelican)’s best cover designs.
And . . . check out Phil Baine’s Penguin by Design: A Cover Story 1935-2005.
Found via LifeClever

When I want to design something that calls for sophistication, I thumb thru the work of Jan Tschichold (1902-1974).
Modernist and . . . Classicist. This contrast leads to some interesting thinking that informs my own ability to design for different industries.
Tschichold put The New Typography on the map by publishing the book on the subject and helped spread the idea of the bauhaus – and modernism – worldwide.
The largest project of his career took place in the late 1940s – the redesign of Penguin’s line of paperbacks (below). As a whole, Penguin’s quality hasn’t wavered since.
Here’s an overview of the work of Tschichold at retinart – with some good links for additional info.
And I’m still looking for a decent (inexpensive) replacement text for my beginning type courses since Tschichold’s Treasury of Alphabets and Lettering is now out of print. Nothing I’ve found so far comes close to showing well-drawn – and well selected – metal specimens.

Penguin redesign, an exercise in subtlety: before (1941) and after (1947)
When it comes to design, UK-based Penguin Books produces some beautiful specimens. And here’s a write up by Ace Jet 170 on the Penguin Collectors Society and their wonderful Penguin by Illustrators monograph.
Pop-up book master – and paper engineer – David A. Carter has been expanding his art into geometric abstraction.
Inspired by the work of Alexander Calder (1898-1976), Carter’s Red Dot series will be on display at the Blue Line Gallery in Roseville, CA [map]
The opening reception is this weekend: Saturday, September 19th, 2009 from 6:30 – 9 p.m.
Read The Sacramento Bee article here.
Show information here.
Exhibition runs thru January 9, 2010.
Found via Jonathan Weast

Illustration for Computer Arts Magazine article about typography
The work of Austrialian designer Christopher Haines.
Eleisha Pechey’s Windsor typeface (1905) is one of my funky favorites. There’s a hint of it in Jeanne Moderno (believe it or not; even moreso in my upcoming text versions), Woody Allen loves it for titles and Sacramento’s Golden 1 Credit Union uses it for a distinct yellow logo.
Today, Fountain Type releases Göran Söderström’s Heroine, a ‘modern interpretation of this rusty pearl is something that always have been missing in the major type libraries.’
More details here.
John Baskerville (1706-1775) was an incredible type designer. His work holds up very well today. He reinvented printing and his ink was beyond compare. And, unfortunately, he was hated by his contemporaries. His type was seen to ‘hurt the eye’ and would be ‘responsible for blinding the nation.’
‘Baskerville the Animated Movie celebrates John Baskerville, the man, the typeface and his future legacy.’
For more about this short film, drop by The Baskerville Project website.
For more detail about John Baskerville and other famous type luminaries, snag a copy of Type: The Secret History of Letters and start reading.
Audrey Kawasaki is an illustrator working out of Los Angeles. Her work channels the soft feminine forms of Mucha mixed with a manga sensibility. Sort of. In this, she takes these influences and makes them all her own. Any references are just that: references.
What really caught me are her notebooks – experimental, playful and erotic. Found in the doodles section of her site, her work plays with cartoonish human forms, ornament, typography and graphic layout. Dazzling.
Visit Audrey’s site here. Her online journal is here. And Twitter . . . here.
Found via Twitter.com/blackbirdsings

Clown: acrylic transfer, acrylic aerosol
The work of Jason Thielke.

twittery bird rescue me by artist Christine Scheer
Here’s a really good article on the social value of Twitter.
Article link originally posted on Twitter; retweeted from @blackbirdsings, @Glinner