creative inspiration

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=15335684&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=1&color=&fullscreen=1&autoplay=0&loop=0

Genghis Kern – A Letterpress And Design Shop from Jesse R. Borrell on Vimeo.

identity

dig for fire identity
[image: kelli anderson]
since the pixies are near & dear to my heart, i’m doubly endeared to this identity system by kelli anderson for dig for fire. thanks to designworklife.com for the link.

packaging

yunyeen yong juice box packaging
[image: likecool.com]
check out this awesome juice box packaging by yunyeen yong. seems like an obvious choice, but i’ve mostly seen only square boxes and bottles in the past. thanks alltop for the link.

design industry

another strike against the print is dead choir: a new design magazine 8 faces is out, a new print magazine for devotees of typography. profiled at underconsideration.com.

beyond design

sea scallops a la caprese
[image: serious eats]
add some delicious scallops to your heirloom tomatoes with sea scallops a la caprese from serious eats. or try a couple fun fall cocktails for the gin drinkers out there: an orange rosemary concoction sorbo serpico, or proserpina if you’re feeling more pomegranate / limoncello, both from lacucinaitalianamagazine.com.

for a fascinating take on creative ways to deal with invasive plants by finding uses for them, turn to one for the herbivores, from utne reader. want to rid your landscape of kudzu? eat it!

creative inspiration

branding

michelle obama garden branding
[image: fastcodesign.com]
lovely packaging for specialty items from michelle obama’s vegetable garden, designed by cronan give home grown handmade items a classy look.

typography

hanging wall letters for home decor
[image: iron accents]
if you’ve been looking for more ways to bring the signage you see on the street into your home, re-nest.com has a great profile on a company that can bring them to you: hanging wall letters from iron accents. cute!

packaging

the tentacle wine packaging
[image: thedielinewine.com]
here’s my favorite for wine packaging this week from thedielinewine.com, the tentacle designed by john schall.

design industry

check out part 2 of my creative co-working adventures on the creative freelancer blog!

a really informative piece from rochelle fainstein of sterling brands on how wine packaging can become more sustainable in both materials and manufacturing: message in the bottle: repackaging wine, from thedielinewine.com

beyond design

you’ve probably noticed i write about food and diy projects, and i put up a fair amount of preservation projects. an interesting piece on this growing movement is home canners wield pickles against food giants, from utne reader. my interest is first to buy fresh food with as little interference in the farmer’s profit margin as possible, and second to replace commodified convenience foods with my own preservations from scratch. i find the assertion by rachel lauden that preservation projects are “…making too many women slaves to their stovepots and canning jars…” completely absurd and sexist. it’s a lifestyle choice and an activity that is hugely rewarding. i love my stovepots and canning jars!

speaking of food, i got myself 2 bunches of dandelion greens from the market this week and went looking some delicious things you can do with them at epicurious.com. i typically stay away from salads with added sugar or bacon [though there are some good ones out there], so here are my picks: dandelion greens with hot olive oil dressing which is a way to wilt the greens without cooking them, greek country salad which you can do with any combination of the listed greens in the recipe, and the standout for me, wilted greens with garlic and anchovies. i love anchovies, this is just what i’m looking for!

biznik article of the week

friday afternoon marketing: tips for weekly small business marketing maintenance by Lidia Varesco Racoma

i met lidia last year when we both chose the same roundtable breakfast group at my first creative freelancer conference in san diego. she’s a great designer and it’s been interesting to watch her launch a product line and develop her practice. this article, friday afternoon marketing, is a great way to set aside time you might be less productive with work and switch gears to do something for your marketing efforts. great list!

creative inspiration

A Letterpress Legacy with Lucky Duck Press from Etsy on Vimeo.

identity

botanical bakery identity design
[image: david brier]
i am loving this fun identity and packaging for botanical bakery by dbd international. so colorful with a homemade twist. see more at identity designed.

packaging

killibinbin wine packaging
[image: thedielinewine.com]
this wine packaging for killibinbin wines is an amazing combination of wine and noir horror flicks done in a nostalgically tasteful way. see more at thedielinewine.com

for more from the dieline in wine packaging, check out: the dieline wine’s latest top 10 wine designs, or for a great selection of packaging of all types: the dieline’s latest top 10 packaging designs.

design industry

oh, hey, look who’s writing for the creative freelancer blog these days. more on creative co-working from yours truly!

beyond design

LACMA The Linda and Stewart Resnick Exhibition Pavilion
[image: fastcodesign.com]
LA welcomes one of the world’s largest naturally-lit spaces, The Linda and Stewart Resnick Exhibition Pavilion, profiled on fastcodesign.com.

i just got my fall garden planted, but in other places, cool-weather items like swiss chard are already ripe for picking. serious eats profiles some great recipes here: in season: swiss chard, and cucina italiana offers some delicious stuffed pasta: swiss chard and ricotta tortelli.

there’s all kinds of exciting wine news. this winery isn’t exactly new, but it’s new to me, we have a local winery right here in echo park: d’augustine vinyard! serious eats brings us what are your wine discoveries which includes a list of 100 wines to drink now. and if you’ve ever wondered what the definition of meritage is, goosecross is happy to explain it for you: what is a meritage wine?

biznik article of the week

If You Want Something Done Right, Hire an Entrepreneur to Do It! by Caterina Rando

if you’re in the position of running a business and need specific work done, but it’s not enough to keep an employee busy in the long term, there are all kinds of solopreneurs who probably focus on the exact task as a niche. rando takes the position that employees can’t serve every purpose, so why not divide what you might spend on payroll and go to the experts. she maintains 15 entrepreneurs as vendors rather than having employees and her article is a great list of criteria she looks for when deciding on who to work with.

7 ways to have fun at work

7 ways to have fun at work

following a theme around labor day, the LA area chamber asked me to present to the bimonthly referral breakfast on taking the labor out of labor and making work fun. i’ve heard a lot of talk from friends about workplaces blocking social networking sites or banning other non-work activities in an effort to get employees focused on spending more of their day working. i have always found this to be a silly idea. people need breaks, they’re not machines, so if it’s not facebook, it’s going to be something else. why not accept breaks and non-work activities as part of the workday and take them back so people are happily contributing in a variety of activities?

creative brainstorming: set aside some time to work on upcoming projects in a freeform brainstorming session. if you work in a big company, take your department or some crossover folks from related departments. if you’re a small studio, select the team assigned to a certain project. if you work on your own, set up a group of other independent professionals in your industry. get everyone out of their offices and start some open creative discussions on how best to approach the next assignment or project. bouncing ideas off others can help refine them before work is done, or inform you on a new direction you hadn’t considered. in many cases, ideas are the most valuable thing we sell, so giving people an open space where they can play and cultivate them helps everyone get to better ideas.

improvement strategies: this is going to sound meta, but i think it’s important to get outside of work and then talk about work and ways to improve workflow. rather than assume you have a finished system, treat it like an evolving creature that’s best managed by allowing for change and improvement by the people running the workflow systems. take your department or compose a group of people from related departments. if you’re in a small company, include everyone. if you’re on your own, compose a group from within your industry with similar challenges and systems. for each meeting, pick one system, talk about how it’s going and let the people directly involved contribute their thoughts on improvement. allowing people to contribute improvements on the way they work makes them feel valued and engaged. they know what they do best, let them help make it better.

net-walking: why settle for the same old status meetings in the conference room or around the boss’ desk? get your blood circulating and get outside for a walk & talk meeting or department check-in. or if you work on your own, set up a net-walking group where you talk about how things are going, and set out your goals for the next week. this kind of outing takes the same amount of time as a sit-down meeting, but it gets people energized and makes everyone feel good that the idea they need to do everything work-related inside is a myth.

plan a field trip to a relevant site or exhibit: support professional development on the job with periodic group trips to places relevant to your industry. if you’re a design team, visit a design-related museum exhibit every other month and alternate with visits to print vendors or lunch with your web development team. if you work on your own, set up a professional development group with meetup or your local AIGA chapter and go to events together or set up vendor tours as a group. when you learn about the systems that affect your own workday, you can better plan around how those systems work, and work with your vendors more effectively. and if you’re just going to look at really cool stuff, well, that’s inspiring for the times when you get to make really cool stuff!

research & presentation group: rather than expecting employees to do research on their own time, make it part of the workday. whether you work for a company or on your own, compose a group that does 1 hour of research on relevant topics to work or the industry, and meets once per week to bring their favorite item to share and present. everybody benefits from each persons unique perspective, and you can actively build a collection of great resources.

networking lunches: the concept is pretty simple, but usually doesn’t get organized as a team building experience. choose a group of main contacts from a few departments, or a list of cross-disciplinary solopreneurs [2 print designers, 2 web developers, 2 illustrators, 2 photographers] , and have lunch on a biweekly or monthly basis to build relationships, learn about what each person does and expand your own horizons. you can let them be freeform networking, or pick a theme or discussion topic and address something new each time. giving people who have a working relationship a chance to know each other better outside work allows them to see the bigger picture of each person’s workday, and they work together more harmoniously in the future.

team building outreach: one great way to focus on relationships and team building outside the office is to organize outreach efforts. pick an organization you’d like to support, and assemble a team to participate on behalf of your company or industry. you can walk or run for a fundraising charity, get a group of green thumbs to help with organizations that replant green spaces, or take time out of the holidays to work at your local soup kitchen. what does this do for work? it gives people a chance to get outside their roles and work together outside structure, solving problems as a matter of consensus, and getting to know each other better as part of the process.

aside from the benefits we try to quantify when justifying indirectly productive activities, these things are fun and engaging, and make for motivated people who feel valued beyond simply their contributions to work. support and appreciation for professional development leads to self-motivation, which is invaluable in the workplace, but it starts by making room for it and letting go of the false work ethic dictating that any time spent away from a desk is time lost. rather, it’s time invested.

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creative inspiration

identity

landfit logo
[image: designedbygoodpeople.com]
this logo for a gardening matchmaking service is really appealing to those of us who love gardening. and i love the concept, a service that pairs people who want to garden but have no land with those who have land & want a garden, but don’t want to do it. brilliant!

publications

ferocious quarterly
[image: ferocious quarterly]
announcements of a new publication, ferocious quarterly, have been posted in a few design communities. from their site: Ferocious is a curated, quarterly publication that collects illustrators, graphic artists, short fiction authors and written text. indeed! thanks how magazine for the link.

parse is a new blog project from how magazine, aiming to make sense of issues and information relevant to design practitioners. check it out!

this just in from the design review of books, a review of jost hochuli, detail in typography.

design industry

take a spin through the annals of design history: graphic design through the decades series: the 70s, from inspiredology.com

if you’re a creative professional in need of some marketing mentoring, ilise benun’s marketing groups are about to kick off for fall. join the track that’s right for you and get one-on-one help from a creative industry marketing pro: marketing mentor’s advanced marketing groups.

another great installment from design*sponge: biz ladies: using a blog to grow your business.

culture

some interesting looks at labor day, what it’s not currently, and what it could be. labor day is almost meaningless now. we can change that, by steve mccallion for fastcodesign.com: With an increasing belief that socioeconomic mobility is now less possible in the US than in other countries, Labor Day has the potential to reclaim some of its initial promise — a celebration of American labor and an inspiration to the American worker.

another look includes what ever happened to labor, by seth godin: In a world where labor does exactly what it’s told to do, it will be devalued. Obedience is easily replaced, and thus one worker is as good as another. And devalued labor will be replaced by machines or cheaper alternatives. We say we want insightful and brilliant teachers, but then we insist they do their labor precisely according to a manual invented by a committee…

article of the week

what design can't do, by mine design, san francisco
[image: mine design, san francisco]

what design can’t do by christopher simmons for aiga.org

if the above graphic doesn’t drive the point home, simmons’ stance is that design can only express what comes from the top down, through a staff working toward a goal through shared vision and strategy. design isn’t going to change your product, your approach to customer service, or turn your average idea into a great one. the attempt to slap a smashing design on an average service will only temporarily distract people, if that, and when their opinions recalibrate to match reality, you’ll be out valuable time and money that could have been spent reworking your system so it’s in line with the brand you want to be. excellent read!

friday music spotlight: robert glasper

robert glasper by joey l.
[image: joey l. for npr]

i first heard of robert glasper because he’s part of my sister’s larger circle of musician friends. he’s got an amazing album, double booked out, and has done some really outstanding arranging and producing on some of my sister’s recordings, but until recently that’s all i’d heard. [sometimes i live under a rock, ha.]

listening to rap with robert glasper by patrick jarenwattananon for npr is a really great sit-down & listen through some standout moments in rap & hip hop history with 2 guys who have loved the genre for years, exploring both of their takes on what each song has meant. take a break & enjoy.