Map the Psychogeography

IMAG0075 1024x684 Map the Psychogeography

Walk: Poem Pictures 2010 is a beautifully bound and lovely exploration/combination of words and drawings from Ian Mcmillan & Iain Nicholls.



I love these, a visual map, dialogue of their local area. very abstract, quirky collection of drawings and words combined. There are a few and suggest you try contact the creators to see if they have made any more books. Really plays with the space like Mallarme and abstract.



Concrete Poetry. They also eloquently describe their process.

Ian used to say as young lad ' "I'm going in the garden to think"

The garden didnt really help the thinking, though it was more the walking helped and still helps my creative process. Thinking somehow doesnt feel like the right word, its a kind of drifting or dreaming. Somehow the mind is going for a walk as well as the legs'

Ian Mcmillan, http://www.ian-mcmillan.co.uk



Fontopoly / Type Trumps / The Font Game

 Fontopoly / Type Trumps / The Font Game

Ought to have been Typopoly. From timbasmits.com. 'PROJECT / FONTOPOLY & MR FONOTOPOLY CHARACTER DESIGN FOR "GO FONT YOURSELF" EXHIBITION'

Timba Smits, a London-based graphic designer from Melbourne, Australia, created this lovely poster called Fontopoly. This looks like a fun game, although like most of these type projects, I'm sure helvetica wasn't there, and arial. Found on armina_79 Twitter There was this I saw recently too, the fontgame.ilovetypography.com & Type Trumps over at Face37.com
'After the hugely successful Type Trumps comes the much awaited sequel — Type Trumps 2 — 30 new designs showing different typefaces being assigned numerical values. Type Trumps, a play on Top Trumps, uses figures to enable the cards to be won or lost using some of the tried and tested 'Top Trumps' rules. The Type Trumps have a 'ranking', which is a subjectively ascribed positional value based on my personal favourites'

Price

£9.99 (Worldwide Shipping)

Buy Now

Paypal

Stockists

Magma Books, UK Design Museum, UK Analogue Books, UK Ghostly International, USA

As featured in

Creative Review, UK Wired, UK Computer Arts, UK Digital Arts, UK

Shape My Language

6c83d7c0475470eeb82bd46306b00529 Shape My Language

Love this! Every student, designer, person has to have the ability to immerse themselves in type physically rather than just mentally. .

. I feel sorry for the characters at the top of these 26 strings with over 4,000 floating letters. Please, please say you can buy this as blinds in your window. Would be very much frowned upon by my partner but she can lump it, how cool! Bring it to the UK, fonts definitely Shape our western Langauge, but this would shape our experience of it. . . www.daltonmaag.com . 05.03. – 12.06.2010 Thankyou Bruno . http://www.walking-chair.com/ . found in creative review april 2010, btw... I dont like the 3d, sans serif, drop caps. But the grey is good, the Caslon revamp and the general overall redesign, 1 thumb up ;o).

Impossible Type

e0a274e1f60f8ae8a4d9309298a3d4a2 Impossible Type

I love this ad. This is the first TV commercial from the new international advertising campaign by ‘AMEX‘, directed by Kuntzel+Deygas (add a dog), agency: Ogilvy & Mather UK.

 

 

 

Agency : Ogilvy & Mather UK
Creative director : Dennis Lewis
Writer : Sue Higgs
Art director : Andrew Bird
TV Producer : Kim Parret

 

This follows on from their faces, see more here: http://theinspirationroom.com/daily/2009/american-express-faces/ 

 

http://www.addadog.com/v3/fiche.php?special=addadog&id=261

 

Periodic Table of Font Elements by Jürgen Siebert

6181cd8fb401e492bc6a77cfded801aa Periodic Table of Font Elements by Jürgen Siebert

One periodic table that will continue to expand as the name periodic suggests as glyphs grow in Typographic design. Its inspiration from the abbreviated typographer isn't bad either, another gem from the Fontshop.       Good use of colour to visually organise  with otf's and ttf's at the top corners.   'An evolving project by Jürgen Siebert inspired by Yves Peters’ The Abbreviated Typographer. Featuring FF Unit. Suggestions welcome.   PDF Download » Learn more typographical terms in our newly expanded Glossary » '   Found in:  Design: A gallery curated by Mehmet Ulga on flickr.  The inspiration was this The Abbreviated Typographer    'This post was originally written for FontShop Benelux’s Unzipped, by Yves Peters. Learn more typographical terms in our newly expanded Glossary. And be sure to check out Jürgen Siebert’s Periodic Table of Font Elements.      Table set in FF Hydra and FF Hydra Extended (quite a nice font btw, looks very DIN inspired)   A while ago I explained on The FontFeed what the suffixes SH and SB – found in Scangraphic Digital Type Collection fonts – meant. Yet there are a lot more abbreviations which are commonly used in the world of typography, and especially digital fonts. Some relate to glyph sets and font formats, others to design traits and foundries, and so on. Their meaning may be obvious for the seasoned type user, but I can imagine that many type novices – and even regular users – can be confused by a good number of them. Here’s a comprehensive overview*. I think I’ve got all of them, but if you encounter any that aren’t included please feel free to contact me and I’ll add them to the list. Abbreviations of type styles and weights will be covered in a FontFeed post. (*) If you are looking for a specific abbreviation scroll down to the bottom of the post for an alphabetical list.'   

Glyph Sets

    'Thanks to Unicode 5.0 and the OpenType format nowadays fonts can accommodate up to 65,535 graphic characters. The PostScript Type 1 format – the previous professional standard – on the other hand is limited to 256 glyphs per file. This may seem sufficient, but actually is just enough for the alphabet in upper and lower case, numerals and punctuation, accented characters for a number of European languages and a number of specials like currency and mathematical characters. So no refined features like small caps, oldstyle numerals, additional ligatures, swashes, ornaments and so on. Those have to be stored in additional font files, which are identified by specific abbreviations. All abbreviations below are found in PostScript Type fonts only.   Exp | Expert Set   Depending on the foundry Expert Sets can hold different configurations of glyphs. The naming implies that those fonts provide all the characters missing in the standard fonts that a typographic expert may have need of. Originally Expert Sets included only small caps, oldstyle or hanging figures, additional ligatures, often super- and subscript letters and numbers, plus some additional special characters and sometimes swashed characters. Normal height capitals were absent, and their slots were occupied by other expert characters. This made Expert fonts rather unwieldy, as converting capitalised words to small caps meant one had select the lowercase characters separately and switch them to the Expert fonts.   SC | Small Caps | OsF | Oldstyle Figures   Small Caps and Oldstyle Figures fonts were the solution to this problem [...]'. Many more in the glossary. Learn more about fonts with Type & Typography by Baines& Haslam (great general reference), A Type Primer by John Kane (very detailed and clear) & The Art of Looking sideways by alan fletcher (mass of inspiration)   Want to make your own font for free but dont know how to digitise it, use this http://www.yourfonts.com/  Get your font for free with this coupon: Happy2010 coupon valid until January 6   a great critique of periodic table style was done by robert here: http://eagereyes.org/blog/2009/visualization-is-not-periodic.html   http://www.flickr.com/photos/fontshop/4134128747/ http://www.fontshop.com/blog/?p=1184

50 Excellent Word as Image / typographic visualisations & resources

 50 Excellent Word as Image / typographic visualisations & resources

Beautiful visualisation pushing the creative use of processing with these Word as Image abstract faces into the realm of concrete poetry. Made by scloopy aka Ryan Alexander see his site onecm.com.

 

 

McCann Erickson Manchester has created a poster campaign for a mental health organisation that combines photography and Processing (B.Fry & C.Reas) to great effect.

 

The two six sheet posters are for Leeds Counselling and will appear in doctors' surgeries, clinics, student halls and other suitable locations throughout Leeds.

 

I added it to my list of visualisation types: http://visualthinkmap.ning.com/#Defintions 

Analyze a text   IM
Text / Image  GA
Word
Tree
Wordle
Tag
Cloud
Phrase
Net

 

 

Word
as 

Image

 

see full list of types here: 

 

 

from: http://creativereview.co.uk/cr-blog/2009/november/processing-thoughts

see more wonderful Words as Image at my gallery website http://wordasimage.ning.com/ and please contribute great word as images you have seen there,

 

From sam winston, me, diter rot in bok, h5, neville brody, apollinaire, marinetti, cobbing, kerr & knoble

 

 
 

 

Many more there.

 

Try a more easier approach in photoshop with this great step by step tutorial.

 

 

 

 

This was an excellent post from andy, Typographic Map Collection 1 of 2. Love the Blog, Brilliant Post

 


 

 

 set aside some time to sit and watch this all the way through as it is simply brilliant, immense collection and highly informative of the subject. the mother of all collectors. trust me you will be trumped in your hoarding and collecting abilities compared to these 2: 

 

 

 

ubu.com/film/sackner_concrete.html
great site, not brilliant to navigate but comprehensive

 

This is a good read (apologies if hard to read)

 

 

View more documents from visual_think_map.

 

this did the blog rounds. rightly so its good.

 

 

 

This is really good too, more details of its creators etc here: http://wordasimage.ning.com/video/typophile-film-festival-5 

 

 

Typophile Film Festival 5 Opening Titles from Brent Barson on Vimeo.

 

see also:

 

sackner
archive of visual and concrete poetry. colossos collection

 

garden digest. l
o n g list of visuals

 

studio
cleo. stephane mallarme bio

 

ubu web. vast resource on sound, image, word
poetries

 

I have done many other posts on word as image pieces so see related posts or view archive. Thanks

Infographic Typography

dba101ccd361ff3836cc41437a730a6c Infographic Typography

In 1989 Erik and Joan Spiekermann signed contracts with leading type foundries, packed their small office with floppy disks full of fonts, and started taking phone orders.

   

FontShop became the first independent retailer of digital type. Twenty years later we’re still stocking the best fonts (though the number has grown and the medium has changed) and still answering phones.  

Its a great clean, clear and bold infographic sectioning off different infographic styles. Really beautiful, I'm always wanting to connect the beauty and functionality of type with information graphics. Reminds me of Nicholas Feltrons work self-mapping.html (update: from armina.thesis blog, it is by N.Feltron)

  See also: NB: Studio - london-kerning.html   from: http://www.fontshop.com/20years/   found: http://www.datavisualization.ch/showcases/typography-meets-infographics

The Visual Dictionary

 The Visual Dictionary

this looks like an excellent project that I am probably blogging that was
blogged a while ago but, well worth another blog post dedicating to it.

the only rule to the tvd, only a single word must be visible, cannot have
more than one distinguishable word.

free to sign up and a great inspiration on typography and it has an A to Z to
navigate the words.

http://thevisualdictionary.net/recent/

unrelated but useful: http://www.slatebox.com/Home/HowItWorks

Typographic Nuance

 Typographic Nuance

'a typographic interpretation of obama's inauguration speech, made for dutch magazine 'creatie' the only rule was no images allowed... i decided to analyse the intonation by watching it on 'you tube' and breaking it down in terms of recurring words and emphasis...'

It is nice to finally see a more creative typographic approach to visualising obama's speeches. Looking at what i like to term typographic nuance, examining the use of alphabet & numbers paradigms.

It really delves into the literature from Post-structuralism, deconstruction (jacques derrida) & barthes, with authorship issues as the meaning (semantics of language) is determined by interpretation on part of the viewer, and so as barthes described this as being the death of the author who is unable to construct meaning.

‘The spoken word is, generally, less formal. Dialogues involve interaction (speaker and listener) are notoriously difficult to ‘control’. This, of course, is also their value; offering the creative, thinking process in its improvised form’ (david jury/about face pg 134).

Of course interpreation takes you into semiotics (the study of signs) with structuraliism french literary theory Ferdinand de Saussure who quite rightly 'posited that signs, rather than being isolated elements with self-contained meanings, are culturally independent parts of an overall network whose meaning is derived from the relationship between the parts’ (Dliteracy, heller/pomeroy, p149).

This cultural independancy is partly the reason that communication has these "open" interpretations of meanings that is where the wonderful (graphic design orientated blogger here) Cranbrook academy and Katerine McCoy, see French Currents of the Letter from 1978 which this work really reminds me of (r.poynor, p66) and jeff keedy & ed fella, then Cranbrook themes continued in David Carson & Neville Brody.

‘Reading requires that we use our intellect, but deconstructed typography further encourages a “shifting movement from awareness to knowledge, to desire and its negation”. The eye roams, looking into the printed page or glowing screen, where meaning is revealed through an evaluation of the entire space. Deconstruction has not simply addressed the look of design but a way of looking at the design’ (GD&R, gunnar swanson ed/zelman, p59).

This type and space led my research onto Stephane Mallarme with 'les coup de des' 1897. Mallarme states, ‘the poem “does not everywhere break with tradition; in its presentation I have in many ways not pushed it far enough forward to shock, yet far enough to open people’s eyes”’. This idea of engaging our intellect and making us interpret this space, typographic deconstruction (GD Concise History, hollis, p37).

Also not forgetting Guillaume Apollinaire with 'Calligrammes' 1918 leading off to concrete poetry and this fine design is continued with John Furnival & more recent mississippi, functioning ferdinand, 389-type, 3d-calligram, typographic-city-child and probably more.

This coninues quite rightly with word as image as the conversation does not need image as Creatia said no image. Lovely to see Infographics blended together with concrete poetry, I know it is monochrome but does it really need colour? wonderful work.

I explored typographic techniques with examples in my work, just leave comments or sign up to visualthinkmap.ning.com and message visualthinkmap i can share my findings back then.







Great project. Try the word links as there is a lot of good stuff i tried to link through to.

Thanks martin pyper

from: http://www.behance.net/Gallery/obamas-speech-a-typographic-interpretation/209583


found: http://infothesis.yanamitchell.com/post/95935291/obamas-speech-a-typographic-interpretation-on


check out:


type2 nuance a4 sec2 - 2005

by visual think map



type nuance a4 sec1 - 2005

poynor reference is from the book No More Rules, (cranbrook link looks inside the book).

Mapping the Creative Process

 Mapping the Creative Process

Damn good stuff they make, wish they were more prolific in their creation but they are well
worth the wait. How appropriate then their next one is the Creative Process. I'm sure we all
think things can be included but they have pretty much nailed it. I am sure it will be doing the blog rounds as it is well deserved, but as from the blogs I am fed and try to digest from google reader it hasnt yet, so lets start the ball rolling.

Share with your many more readers than mine and explore their versatile and equally clear 'back catalogue'.


I tell you, the amount of posters I want to print so big and put up in a classroom, Periodic table of Typefaces, this, Periodic Table of Design, psd-poster - shortcuts by designbyvent, Type Timeline Map... and I'd be tempted with Periodic Table of Visualisation Methods, Information Aesthetics Diagram.

Here's what they say,

'The creative process is not just iterative; it’s also recursive. It plays out “in the large” and “in the small”— in defining the broadest goals and concepts and refining the smallest details. It branches like a tree, and each choice has ramifications, which may not be known in advance.

Recursion also suggests a procedure that “calls” or includes itself. Many engineers
define the design process as a recursive function:

discover > define > design > develop > deploy


The creative process involves many conversations—about goals and actions to achieve them—conversations with co-creators and colleagues, conversations with oneself.
The participants and their language, experience, and values affect the conversations'.

http://www.dubberly.com/concept-maps

Download PDF - http://www.dubberly.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/ddo_creative_process.pdf

check out their model of innovation concept map,

Innovation concept map by hugh dubberly , Sean Durham, Ryan Reposar, Paul Pangaro, and Nathan Felde

More here:
A Model of The Creative Process
A Model of Play

How Organizations Track Customers

Domain Name Map