

Lisa of Sapling Press is high up on my list of people I’d like to have coffee with sometime.
(thank you jennifer)


Lisa of Sapling Press is high up on my list of people I’d like to have coffee with sometime.
(thank you jennifer)

Timbuktu is the first iPad Magazine for Kids. It was art directed by the wonderful Olimpia Zagnoli. Download it from the App Store.
With summer traveling season upon us, I am excited I discovered this Travel Boster Seat. It’s both an EEC approved car booster seat and a practical backpack in one cunning design, so there’s no need to stress about booster seats when traveling; use as a normal backpack or as hand luggage on the plane, and convert into a booster seat as necessary.
Love the simplicity of this Ruler Height Chart. Yes to minimal, not heavily decorated kids stuff.
This fantastic two-toned patent leather tote in blue and cream is 100% made from vintage leather sofa (!) and lined with a light blue vintage button-down shirt. Available over at Poketo.
A big thank you to FontFont for sponsoring this week’s RSS Feed.
fontfont.com – the long-standing home of many of the world’s most popular fonts like FF DIN, FF Meta, FF Dax, FF Scala, FF Kievit and FF Tisa – has been completely updated and re-designed. FSI FontShop International’s FontFont library is internationally acclaimed by type lovers and connoisseurs as one of the world’s leading collections of contemporary typefaces, both aesthetically and technically. Visit fontfont.com today – you’ll find that the new simplified design concept makes it much easier to test drive and buy fonts than ever before.
(Interested in sponsoring a week of my RSS feed, learn more here.)
The “Bill” in question is 80+ New York Times photographer Bill Cunningham. For decades, this Schwinn-riding cultural anthropologist has been obsessively and inventively chronicling fashion trends and high society charity soirées for the Times Style section in his columns “On the Street” and “Evening Hours.” Documenting uptown fixtures (Wintour, Tom Wolfe, Brooke Astor, David Rockefeller—who all appear in the film out of their love for Bill), downtown eccentrics and everyone in between, Cunningham’s enormous body of work is more reliable than any catwalk as an expression of time, place and individual flair. In turn, Bill Cunningham New York is a delicate, funny and often poignant portrait of a dedicated artist whose only wealth is his own humanity and unassuming grace.
Bill Cunningham New York is now airing in theatres. I am quite excited to see this. Go (here) to see where it’s playing.
(via A Photo Editor)
I just got my copy of Uppercase’s Work/Life 2 today and couldn’t put it down for what seemed an eternity. The Uppercase Directory of Illustration features 100 illustrators from around the world, compiled in a beautiful design.
Here’s a flip through the entire book:
I discovered this lovely IKEA Hack over on re-nest: IKEA Lampshade gone Planter.
I think I might build on this idea and make place cards for our daughter’s upcoming 5th birthday party. She would love it!

I just gasped at the sight of this ‘foldable’ chair called Flux. I would love to keep two of these in my trunk and unfold whenever a lounging opportunity presents itself. They would also look great in our studio! Oh, the possibilities!
Check out Jaime’s thorough post over on Design Milk.
Flux Chair on Dwell.com from flux on Vimeo.
I would buy up an entire shelf of these cans just because of the marvelous packaging. It’s by a UK-based chain supermarket called Waitrose.
(via melissaeastondesign)

Lovely paper tree creations by Sandra Juto.
A mug made out of wood? Oh my! I would love to see what it feels like to drink out of this.
These ties were made on a single needle sewing machine, by a single operator: J.A. Christensen Maker Ties
(via geniusvomit)
This “Hacker Takes Over Times Square Using Homemade Transmitter And iP” video made me chuckle. I hope the guys of Improv Everywhere saw this. Just saying:
(via Ideas Are Awesome)

G and I bought a new apartment (yay!) that we now have to renovate. We are in total researching mode and I am obsessed with the idea of white-ish wooden floors. And this is where I am reaching out to you, my readers: Would you be able to direct us to pre-finished white-ish looking wooden floors similar to the ones pictured above? I am sure lots of my Scandinavian readers will have tips. I hope to find a wooden floor manufacturer that carries a similar type of flooring here in the US.
By the way, the image above is from Unplggd. It is Lotta Agaton’s home and it’s making me swoon. Click here for more images.
“We’re all faced throughout our lives with agonizing decisions, moral choices. Some are on a grand scale, most of these choices are on lesser points. But we define ourselves by the choices we have made. We are, in fact, the sum total of our choices. Events unfold so unpredictably, so unfairly, Human happiness does not seem to be included in the design of creation. it is only we, with our capacity to love that give meaning to the indifferent universe. And yet, most human beings seem to have the ability to keep trying and even try to find joy from simple things, like their family, their work, and from the hope that future generations might understand more.”
— Professor Levy played by Martin S. Bergmann, a New York University clinical professor in psychology, in the movie Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989) by Woody Allen.
(Via QuoteVadis)
The purpose of these fine porcelain containers is as elastic as the six colored rubber bands that accompany each one and make a striking contrast against the bright white. Created by Louise Campbell for Kähler. Beautiful!
Blogger Scott Schuman aka “The Sartorialist“, shares photos from his Visual Life with 70,000 readers a day.
UPDATE: For some reason the video doesn’t seem to load, just click here and then click on the Sartorialist video.
(via intel.com/visuallife)

Here’s an overview of the upcoming April CreativeMornings in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Zurich.
N E W Y O R K
Date: April 15th, 2011
Speaker: Christoph Niemann (flying in from Berlin)
Host: Galapagos Art Space
Sponsors: Mailchimp and Freshbooks
Organizer: swissmiss
More info and rsvp at creativemornings.eventbrite.com
L O S A N G E L E S
Date: April 8, 2011
Speaker: Michelle Mcilroy, Lomography USA
Host: Lomography Gallery Store
Sponsor: The Fox is Black
Organizer: Jon Setzen
More info and rsvp at losangelescreativemornings.eventbrite.com
S A N F R A N C I S C O
Date: April22, 2011
Speaker: Craig Mod
Host: The glorious Typekit headquarters
Sponsors: Happy Cog and Typekit
Organizer: Greg Storey
More info and rsvp at sfcreativemornings.eventbrite.com
Z U R I C H
Date: April 8, 2011
Speaker: Memonic Co-Founder Dr. Dorian Delz
Host: The Hub Zurich
Sponsor: rtp Agency
Organizer: Daniel Frei
More info and rsvp at zurichcreativemornings.eventbrite.com
Check out our site creativemornings.com for more info and for links taped talks.
A few weeks back Scott Belsky visited Studiomates and gave me a sneak peak at his soon to be launched portfolio service called ProSite. I must admit, I was completely (!) blown away by what he has built. ProSite is going to make it supereasy for anyone to have a personal portfolio site that syncs with your Behance Network. You won’t need to know any coding whatsoever but will be able to customize it as much as you like. I saw the user interface that Scott, Matias and his team have created and it made me jump off my seat! These guys are brilliant!
The potential of ProSite becomes clear when you consider how everything is connected… The magic of ProSite is the ability to seamlessly add multi-media projects in one central place (the Behance Network) and then have them show up with different styles on your own personal and fully customized website. Your projects can be automatically pushed to other portfolios you maintain online like LinkedIn, AIGA, MTV, etc… Which means that your “following” of peers, fans, recruiters, and press can easily follow and stay updated whenever you complete a project.
When published, your projects are eligible to be featured on Behance’s 10+ Curated Gallery sites like TypographyServed.com, industrialdesignserved.com, toydesignserved.com as well as other galleries around the web.
Your projects can also be searched and sorted by journalists, recruiters, fans using the Behance Network’s search capabilities (The Network now gets over 7 million visitors every month). For example:
Work done for Nike by people/teams based in Australia http://bit.ly/hH50W6
“Most Appreciated” Typography Projects in Romania
“Most Viewed” Graphic Designers in San Francisco
Scott put it right when he said: “We’re entering a new era where a “static, outdated, isolated portfolio site of images” no longer cuts it.”
ProSite hasn’t publicly launched yet but people can sign up for beta now: prosite.com
Believe me, you will be blown away by the customization capabilities that ProSite will offer to its users. Not to mention how easy it will be to push the new work to all the different channels.
I am seriously excited for the entire Behance team. These guys are going to rock the portfolio site world. Here are a few examples of first ProSite portfolios:

Marius Roosendaal (Amersfoort, Netherlands)
And this one takes the cake:

Felix NG (Singapore)