the design tag

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Eureka Carpark in Melbourne

Axel Peemoeller designed this great way-finding-system for the Eureka Tower Carpark in Melbourne, Australia. It consists of giant words that only snap into focus when you drive in the right direction, providing strong orientational cues.

I always loved anamorphic images and this is a both brilliant and useful implementation. The project won several international design awards.


Innovation in Wine Labels

I just stumbled across a really innovative design idea for wine labels via Noisy Decent Graphics.

Innovative Wine Labels

If you’re at a friends place for dinner and you have a really, really nice bottle of wine, how often do you remember its name when you’re shopping for wine again? Most of us have better things to remember, anyway. Or maybe you’re a bit tipsy and won’t even remember whether it was a bottle of red or a bottle of white. Anyway, this is one of the ideas that makes you smack your head and ask yourself why you didn’t think of this

Innovative Wine Labels


Do websites need to look exactly the same in every browser?

Finally, an answer to that almost biblical question.


Alberto Seveso

Alberto Seveso is a freelance graphics designer living in Rome. I knew his old site but somehow forgot about it. Today I stumbled across his new portfolio via agenturblog. Alberto has a few phantastic works on his page, almost all of them surreal photomontages.

Howto Disappear

In his shop you can buy great prints or even just the digital version as a PDF, where you have to organize the printing yourself. A neat idea.


Photoshop’s New Logo

Since the last rebranding of Adobe’s design suite has been nine months ago (remember the Periodic Table o’ Elements?), apparently it’s time for another new logo, this time for the Photoshop “family” of applications.

Photoshop Logo

Opinions? Well, apparenty it represents a P. At least according to John Nack, who also has more details on the whole rebranding thing. It’s a speech bubble. Yes, another one. Welcome to the bandwagon! And it’s in 3D with glossy finish, practically screaming “photoshop filters!”. Where’s the lens flare?

Anyway, while the logo might not please everybody (judging from a lot of not so nice comments on John’s post), at least it seems Adobe has finally rediscovered Photoshop as a valuable brand.


Speech Bubbles: The Web2.0 Catch All Symbol

I just stumbled over this roundup of web2.0 logos all featuring a speech bubble. I didn’t realize it was that prevalent.

Bubble Hell


Visualizing Inline Links

Joen of Noscope has just suggested, what I’ve been trying to tell people for nearly a year. With the advent of pages commonly referred to as “Web 2.0” sites, the styling of inline or AJAX links became an issue. Usually links have to be indicated to the user, since clicking them slowly loads a whole different page and the user is unable to interact with the current page. The common indicator we use for links is the hand cursor.

Normal Link

AJAX or JavaScript links, however, immediately change a part of the page you’re looking at, without reloading the whole page and without disturbing the user experience. The user can still interact with the page. For example on Pageflakes - the personalized start page I’m using - you can find both types of links: normal ones that take you to another page and AJAX links that allow you to edit settings or reload embedded RSS feeds. The cursor for both types of links is the same, a hand. For the Web-savvy, this might not pose much of a problem, we intuitively know most of the time what type of link we deal with but for other users, this can be increasingly difficult to discern.

Inline Link

The solution Joen proposes, and what I have previously used in these cases, is simply not changing the cursor at all. In reality, it’s not a link, it’s more of a pushbutton that looks different, so why not use the same cursor we use for buttons?

The implementation is rather easy as it only requires a simple cursor: default; rule. To allow for fallback (if the user has no JavaScript, the AJAX link becomes a normal link), I just embedd the stylesheet with JavaScript so I get a hand cursor for people without JavaScript, where the link actually reloads the page and a default cursor (pointer) for people where the link only affects the current page.

Adding a stylesheet via Javascript is rather easy too:

<script type="text/javascript">
<!--//--><![CDATA[//><!--
 	if( document.getElementById && document.createElementNS && document.getElementsByTagName ) {
		var javacss = document.createElementNS( "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", "link" );
		if( javacss ) {
			javacss.setAttribute( "rel", "stylesheet" );
			javacss.setAttribute( "type", "text/css" );
			javacss.setAttribute( "href", "/_css/java.css" );
			javacss.setAttribute( "media", "all" );
			document.getElementsByTagName( "head" )[0].appendChild( javacss );
		}
	} else {	
		document.write( '<link rel="stylesheet" href="/_css/java.css" type="text/css" media="all" />' );
	}

//--><!]]>
</script>

So, what do you think?


Jealous Computers: Nokia Viral Advertising

The latest viral marketing campaign by Nokia is again beautifully done, consisting of a website complete with videos, victim reports and posters warning of jealous computers attacking their owners when they buy or use a Nokia N95. As a nice twist, users can upload their own videos, pictures or stories of attacks and receive a specially designed T-Shirt.

Nokia N95 Viral Advertising


Kiss Me

Digitally manipulated images of people kissing themselves. “Sort of disturbingly erotic, in an erotically disturbing way.”, as Kottke said.

pupsam.jpg


5 Segons: Brilliant Ad

The Spanish advertising agency minnim made a great ad for 5 segons, a campaign of the Banc de Sang i Teixits, a Spanish public company that manages and administers the donation, transfusion and analysis of blood and blood plasma.

5 Segons


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