
I feel the same. (Illustration by Alex Noriega)

I feel the same. (Illustration by Alex Noriega)

Made me smile. (Who created this? Who can I give credit to?) Created by Alex Noriega, from Barcelona, Spain. A big thank you to my reader and commenter Bruce who tracked the originator of this sketch down.
I really wish bloggers would be more diligent in naming their sources and giving credit. (enter sigh here)
(via tim)

Kentaro Nagai created a project that uses the world map to form animals from the Chinese zodiac. Check out the Flash presentation!
(via my latest blog discovery hrrthrr)

This coming thursday (April 2, 2009) PSFK will host PSFK Conference New York in Battery Park. The event celebrates the most creative ideas and inspirational organizations emerging from the city – people who we write about on our daily news site at PSFK.com. They will host 12 lectures and panels in topics that include arts & culture, design, digital & mobile technology, marketing & advertising, sustainability, social media and publishing.
I am seriously bummed that I have an all day meeting that day and won’t be able to attend. The speaker line-up is fantastic.
Design is 70% dealing with people, 3% the idea, 2% selling the idea, 2% the brief, 2% being pig headed, 1% printing, 3% eye for detail, .6% invoices, 2% coffee, .7% tracking, .1% warm glow, .6% panic, 1% 4am, .6% staring, .2% checking, 1% letting go, .8% keeping hold, .7% estimates, .3% checking, .4% proofs, .1% colour, .9% understanding, .4% marketing, 1% checking, .8% beach ball, .5% mice, .3% keynotes, .4% persuasion, .2% bragging, .5% smiling, 2% knowing when to stop. – Duane King
(via hrrthrr)

PXL Pendant Light by Fredrik Mattson. A beauty.
“Google Gravity” by Hi-ReS

Why buy many cards for different occasions if you can have an “One Card for All Occasions Stamp”? It saves time, money and headache. All-In-One Card Stamp by Ji Lee.

These 100% recycled mini notebooks made me look. Letterpress printed in gold ink these notebooks are sure to be great for everyday use.

I am excited to announce our upcoming CreativeMornings with Andy Bonventre of Google. On April 10, 2009 Andy will be discussing how he evangelizes the symbiotic relationship between design and engineering, and how he learned to trust his designer. Andy has been a loyal CreativeMornings attendee and I am excited that he is switching sides for this month’s event! Venue will be announced shortly! I am smiling all over my face: Google is hosting the event! YAY!
Interested in attending? Make sure to r.s.v.p via email. We are filling up quickly. Please tell us your name and what industry you’re in. (We will later on send you a confirmation email with all the necessary details for the event.) We’ve reached our limit, I apologize.
NEW: Follow CreativeMornings on twitter!
We are looking for a breakfast sponsor that will cover coffee and bagels. You would in exchange get mentioned on swissmiss and during the actual event. Please get in touch sponsor [at] swiss-miss.com if interested.
Tonight’s Pecha Kucha event was a fantastic experience. Even though I must say, I was flabbergasted once I saw the venue – not what I expected. It was incredibly loud, dark and there were no seats for the audience. Ever since I started the CreativeMornings 10Minute lecture series I have become really interested in the ‘packaging’ of an event and how it affects the experience. I wonder how this evening would have been perceived in a more quiet environment with seating for everyone and a noise level that would actually allow for a conversation.
The unfortunate venue aside, I loved the event. The broad range of topics was intriguing and the quality of the 6min40second presentations was impressive. While it seems a bit forced at first, to have the slides timed on a 20second interval, it really does force the presenter to keep it short and to the point. Definitely a format I will keep in mind for upcoming presentations or events. Michael has a great summary of the event, read it here.
Thanks to Marc, the gracious organizer. I am definitely looking forward to attend future Pecha Kuchas. Thanks to G for filming the event with his photocamera. For those of you interested in my presentation, here are my 400seconds of Pecha-Kucha-Fame:
swissmiss presenting at Pecha Kucha NYC | March 2009 from swissmiss on Vimeo.

Organic cotton tote bag by Hugo Guinness! A lovely and practical gift idea!

Probably not a good idea to give this Pork Chop Piggy Bank to a Vegetarian. Made me smile. Design by Rob Price of Thwart Design

280slides.com let’s you create beautiful presentations, access them from anywhere, and share them with the world. With 280 Slides, there’s no software to download and nothing to pay for – and when you’re done building your presentation you can share it any way you like.
(thank you tom)


Now that beach season is coming up, on this side on the planet at least, products like the above towel make me look. HANS IM GLÜCK by Jan Dobmaier is a Towel and bag in one. Available here.

Today’s Layer Tennis match is shaping up to be an epic battle. Jason Santa Maria (Web designer extraordinaire, creative director for A List Apart) will be squaring off against Derek Powazek (Web veteran, industry influencer, co-founder of JPG Magazine), with commentary by none other than the founder of Layer Tennis himself, Jim Coudal. Tune in at 3 p.m. (Eastern) and watch as the designers test the limits of their creativity with the power of Adobe Creative Suite tools, such as Photoshop and Illustrator, at their fingertips.
See below for the final volley from last week’s match between Armin Vit and Sam Potts. All of this season’s matches are available in the archives section of the Layer Tennis site.
Go Jason! Go Jason! (jumping up an down with my red and white pompoms!)
Slagsmålsklubben – Sponsored by destiny from Tomas Nilsson on Vimeo.
(via oneplusinfinity)
We are having a relaxing day at home, trying to fight off Ella’s fever. Here are Ella’s favorite fever remedies:

Chillin’ With Pingu. What a fitting title! (Current watch count since this am: 2.5)

How to Catch a Star, Oliver Jeffers. (Current read count since this am: 7)

Organic Vitamin C Lollipops. Best cold/fever medicine ever, according to little Ella.
What secret remedies do you have?

Our little Ella came down with a fever mid-afternoon and I rushed home thinking I wouldn’t be able to make it to tonight’s design panel discussion at the New York Museum of Arts & Design. But she rallied and thanks to the power of Motrin, and wonderful G, I was able to attend. The esteemed panel included Jonathan Adler (Furniture Designer), Paula Scher (Designer, Pentagram) and Ahmad Sardar-Afkhami (Architect) (I asked him and he doesn’t have a site up at this point, but should so shortly). The invitation to the event stated that the panel discussion would examine how industries will reinvent themselves in this new era; What’s Next for Design?
Adam Gopnik, a staff Writer for the New Yorker was the moderator for the panel, which by the way was sponsored by VW. For those of you who read my blog regularly, you might have come across a post or two where I express my frustration with panels. Well, the unthinkable has happened, I truly enjoyed this panel tonight, and it was very much thanks to Adam Gopnik. He did a *fantastic* job in steering the conversation, giving it an interesting flow. Hat tip to Adam.
I simply want to list a few notes I took of thougths that I thought were interesting:
Adam made a point that ‘design’ is the most present and most invisible element in our life.
- Jonathan Adler calls his own philosophy happy-chic. He believes his sensibility can be traced directly to the way he grew up, the design he was surrounded with. First design related memory of his childhood; their neighbor had a ceramic leopard that left a huge impression. He learned that things can be memorable. By the time he was four he believes it was all instilled in him thanks to his parents and Mrs. Goldsteen, his neighbor. (On a side note: I had never seen Jonathan Adler speak and I was impressed in how incredibly funny and eloquent he was. Definitely my panelist highlight!)
- Paula Scher stated that sylistically she has no personal ethic, no one thing is right.
- “The magic of applied art is that we have a problem to solve, opposed to the fine artist. We respond to and solve design challenges.” – Jonathan Adler
One of the funniest moments in the evening was when Jonathan Adler spoke about one of his latest projects, the redesign of Barbie’s 50th Anniversary House: “I loved designing for a 100% plastic client! I did this over the top, meta, glitter, frosting, cupcakes house. An amazing opportunity to step back from real life, with real people, to have a plastic client with no husband to weigh in. (Ken is in the picture but peripherally, Ken is not moving in.)”
- “A terrible collaboration is when there is no collaboration. When you work with someone who has no respect for what you do, what you’ve done and your skills. The client from hell is not that client, because you fire him, the client from hell is the one that is actually in the collaborative process and once you agreed on something they call you and they start making changes and slowly but surely more and more modifications kill the design.” Paula Scher
“Bad design is often design that is done by committee or focus groups, it is design that is overly considered, watered down, timid. The more the design comes from my gut, the more focus groups would hate it, but because I have my own stores, I don’t have to ask anyone for permission. I can get direclty to the end user.” Jonathan Adler
One of Jonathan Adler’s three muses is Alexander Girard (midcentury graphic designer), as he thinks that Alexander’s work really communicates the pleasure he got out of design.
- “I am always looking for the thing I don’t know, not the thing I’ve already seen. The beginner’s mind is what I am thriving for. I’ve always done the best design when I didn’t know what I was doing.” Paula Scher
Question from the audience: Design is getting more coverage than it used to. Is that true? “It’s definitely true”, says Paula. “Almost every major magazine now has a design column and a design writer. Why is that? Companies like Apple or Target have made design incredibly l apparent, people are starting to recognize that things are designed. They become savvy and they realize they’re being manipulated. The consumer is starting to have different expectations to environments.”
Overall an interesting evening. Thanks to Slate for organizing, MAD for hosting and VW for sponsoring.