April 2011 CreativeMornings

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.

Ji Lee: The Transformative Power of Personal Projects

Ji Lee is tomorrow’s NYC/CreativeMornings speaker. Here’s a talk he gave at last year’s 99% Conference on The Transformative Power of Personal Projects.

Sarah Kay: If I should have a daughter …

“If I should have a daughter, instead of Mom, she’s gonna call me Point B … ” began spoken word poet Sarah Kay, in a talk that inspired two standing ovations at TED2011. She tells the story of her metamorphosis — from a wide-eyed teenager soaking in verse at New York’s Bowery Poetry Club to a teacher connecting kids with the power of self-expression through Project V.O.I.C.E. — and gives two breathtaking performances of “B” and “Hiroshima.”

The below video made me tear up:

Sarah Kay has been a performing poet since she was 14 years old. She is the founder of Project V.O.I.C.E, teaching poetry and self-expression at schools across the United States. Full bio and more links.


(Thank you Jessi)

“The Power of Side Projects and Eccentric Aunts”

I am very excited to be speaking about “The Power of Side Projects and Eccentric Aunts” at an upcoming SVA Interaction Design Talk Series here in NYC. It is taking place on Wednesday March 30th, 2011 from 6-8pm.

RSVP opens today!

Deb Roy: The birth of a word

The below TED Talk is awe-inspiring:

MIT researcher Deb Roy wanted to understand how his infant son learned language — so he wired up his house with video cameras to catch every moment (with exceptions) of his son’s life, then parsed 90,000 hours of home video to watch “gaaaa” slowly turn into “water.” Astonishing, data-rich research with deep implications for how we learn.

I would give so much to have a map of my very first words in chronological order. What a lucky little boy.

(thank you Jessi!)

CreativeMornings Video: Milton Glaser

We just uploaded another CreativeMornings/NewYork video:

Our first speaker this year was design legend Milton Glaser. Needless to say that only 10 minutes after the RSVP-floodgates opened, this 500 people event was full. Milton’s talk was filled with an insatiable passion for design and amazing nuggets of wisdom.

Thanks to wonderful Sy Abudu, you can enjoy the talk now in Vimeo:

(The event was generously hosted at the School of Visual Arts Theatre which was designed by Milton!)

SXSW Video Guide

This SXSW Video Guide made me laugh! (No, I won’t be at SXSW this year!)

(Thank you Dave)

Ampersand Web Typography Conference

If I lived on the other side of the pond I’d be attending The Ampersand Web Typography Conference in Brighton on June 17th, 2011.

DesignChat Video

Last week I had the honor to be a guest on Ryan McGovern’s DesignChat. He just informed me that the video is now live. You can watch it below, on their site, over on iTunes.

(By the way, sorry that my volume is so much lower than Ryan’s. I had no idea.)

(I took the embedd down as I couldn’t figure out how to turn off autoplay and the Vimeo Upload is still converting)

NYC/CreativeMornings Video with Emily Cohen

Our speaker at the december 2010 CreativeMornings was wonderful Emily Cohen.

Emily has been a consultant to creative professionals for over 20 years providing confidential, best-practice insights and advice on staff, client, and process-management strategies, conducting client surveys and writing winning proposals, creative briefs, and contracts. Her CreativeMornings talk was insightful and filled with hands-on tips. Please enjoy Emily Cohen’s talk:

A big giant thank you to Sy Abudu for offering her video and editing skills.

More Perfect Typography

Last night kicked off what will soon be a regular talk and workshop series here at our collaborative workspace Studiomates. Tim Brown, Type Manager of Typekit, gave a fantastic talk titled “More Perfect Typography”. (Yes, it was a typographic geek fest.) In this talk, Tim guided us through using typographic tools and perspectives that will change the way we design websites.

A big thank you goes to my studiomates Mandy Brown and Jason Santa Maria for putting the event together. We didn’t tape last night’s talk but here’s the same/similar talk Tim gave at last year’s Build Conference:

Tim Brown – More Perfect Typography from Build on Vimeo.

CreativeMornings Video: Liz Danzico

Our speaker at the october 2010 CreativeMornings was wonderufl Liz Danzico of bobulate.com. In her insightful talk Liz reminded us about the power of the pause.

A big giant thank you to Sy Abudu for offering her video and editing skills.

Altitude Design Summit

I am thrilled to be attending and speaking at this week’s Altitude Design Summit in Salt Lake City. Postings will be sparse (if at all), as I’ll be focusing on what my fellow bloggers have to say! But no worries, I’ll be back full force starting next week.

Why don’t you share some of your favorite blogs in a comment below, so we can all discover some new blogs in the meantime? Yes? I’ll comment myself, to kick things off.

LA/CreativeMornings Video with Andrew Gibbs

Our speaker at the January 2011 Los Angeles/CreativeMornings was Andrew Gibbs of The Dieline. This event took place on December 17, 2010 and was generously hosted by Ford & Ching.

I am hugely impressed what Andrew has accomplished being 25 years old. He is an inspiration to all young designers. And how much do I love that he called our upcoming NY/CreativeMornings speaker Debbie Millman the ‘Design Queen of the World’? Made me smile.

A big giant thank you to Grant Withington and Stephen Haynes for offering to shoot and edit the video, with assistance from Michael Mahaffey.

The Los Angeles chapter of Creative Mornings is run by Jon Setzen.

Apartment Therapy Offline Event

I am honored to be part of next week’s Apartment Therapy Offline Event with Judy Ross & Sandy Chilewich at the New York Design Meetup. We will be discussing how we manage to balance family and business.

What: Apartment Therapy’s New York Design Meetup
Panel: Judy Ross, Sandy Chilewich and moi
Topic: Balancing Family & Business: How 3 Designers Make it Work!
Members: 2,411 (rsvp here)
When: Wednesday, January 12: 6:30pm – 8:30pm
Where: Knoll Showroom | 76 9th Avenue (16th Street Entrance) 11th floor, NYC

Read Full Post over on Apartment Therapy. See you there?

AIGA/NY Data Visualization Event

Here’s an event you shouldn’t miss if you live in NYC: AIGA/NY Data Visualization: Method and Madness

The TED Commandments

The founder of TED, Richard Saul Wurman spoke at an event hosted by Smart Design last night. In his presentation he mentioned the 10 TED commandments. Attending a lot of conferences, as speaker or press and also organizing conference-type events myself (CreativeMornings) I am extremely interested in what makes a talk successful.

Amy Tan in her TED Talk described the arrival of the TED Commandments as “something that creates a near-death experience; but near-death is good for creativity…”.

The TED Commandments

Thou Shalt Not Simply Trot Out thy Usual Shtick
Pressure yourself to keep learning about a topic. I have an Information Overload talk I gave a few years ago, and wouldn’t dream of presenting it again without catching up on the latest theories and contributions to the debate.

Thou Shalt Dream a Great Dream, or Show Forth a Wondrous New Thing, Or Share Something Thou Hast Never Shared Before
Don’t be afraid to experiment with what you’ve already learned. Share not only what you know, but what you’d like it to be. Look at your processes, at what you do every day. If it works for you, it’s quite possible the process is a good one and could be shared, inviting discussion to make it even better.

Thou Shalt Reveal thy Curiosity and Thy Passion
It’s your topic, your audience. Own them. Your talk may be at a monthly department meeting or national conference, but most likely you’ve got a keen interest in the subject. Show it!

Perhaps you actually are passionate about the topic, even better. Share your excitement as well as your progress.

Thou Shalt Tell a Story
Involve your audience by giving them someone to empathize with and to make them care. The story might be about yourself or someone else, it doesn’t matter as long as it’s a good tell.

Thou Shalt Freely Comment on the Utterances of Other Speakers for the Sake of Blessed Connection and Exquisite Controversy
As you catch up, read and get involved on blogs by those you admire within the topic. Commenting on posts is a great way to become engaged with those who care about the same things you do. Also explore dissenting opinions, adding your own if you have them.

Thou Shalt Not Flaunt thine Ego. Be Thou Vulnerable. Speak of thy Failure as well as thy Success.
No one wants to hear about how wonderful you are because you figured this out, but the different methods you used to get the conclusion. If you’ve learned from your mistakes, someone else will, too.

Thou Shalt Not Sell from the Stage: Neither thy Company, thy Goods, thy Writings, nor thy Desparate need for Funding; Lest Thou be Cast Aside into Outer Darkness.
While I agree that I don’t usually want to hear a sales pitch, I’d take exception to this when appealing for library funding or for my job.

Thou Shalt Remember all the while: Laughter is Good.
I’ve heard different opinions on humor during talks, but I gave this advice to a staff member just the other day: If you’re going to use humor point it towards yourself. I use self-deprecating humor quite a bit, it seems to somehow relax the audience, especially when teaching technology. Also be careful of humor that may offend someone: I thought about writing this post as if I were Moses and God Himself had delivered the tablets and burning bushes were involved. I reconsidered…probably very wisely.

Thou Shalt Not Read thy Speech.
Worse yet, never turn your back to your audience to read slides. Then again, don’t put so much text on a slide that you’d have to read it at all! Text is for handouts.

Thou Shalt Not Steal the Time of Them that Follow Thee
Make your talk worthwhile with your passion and your knowledge. Give them one big thing to remember a week later, your chance of retention is better the less you try to put in their heads. Even though some training is repetitive in nature, get them excited, fired up and ready to go use what you’ve taught them!

(Image by Rives, transcribed by Tim Longhurst. via alalearning)

NYC/CreativeMornings Video: Rachel Sussman

Our speaker at the august 2010 CreativeMornings was fabulous Rachel Sussman, force behind the fabulous The Oldest Living Things in The World project.

See all our NYC/CreativeMornings videos here.

A big giant thank you to Sy Abudu for offering her video and editing skills.

DesignMatters Podcast

Lovely Debbie Millman was so generous to interview me for her amazing (!) DesignMatters Show. The podcast just went live.

Listen over on DesignObserver
Direct Link to the MP3

Thank you Debbie, it’s such an honor to be part of DesignMatters.

LA/CreativeMornings Video: Zach Frechette

Our speaker at the inaugural Los Angeles/CreativeMornings was Zach Frachette, Co-founder and Editor of GOOD Magazine. The event took place on October 8, 2010 and was generously hosted by Willard Ford of Ford & Ching. Breakfast (and my flight) were sponsored by Something Massive.

The Los Angeles/CreativeMornings chapter is run by my friend and former Brooklynite Jon Setzen. A big thank you to everyone involved.

A big giant thank you to Grant Withington and Stephen Haynes for offering to shoot and edit the video, with assistance from Michael Mahaffey.

Follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/​LosAngeles_CM

Brooklyn Beta

I am happily attending Brooklyn Beta, a conference organized by my studiomates Chris Shiflett (@shiflett) and Cameron Kozcon (@fictivecameron). I must say, I am a little emotional writing this: I am so tremendously proud of how Chris and Cameron pulled off this amazing conference, in the heart of Brooklyn (my home).

Have a quick look at the speaker and attendee list. Can it get any more impressive? NO! You can follow the day over on my twitter stream or by follwing that hashtag #brooklynbeta.

The conference is held at the fantastic (!) Invisible Dog space in the heart of Cobble Hill. Thanks to Lucien Zayan, the gracious host. And a big giant virtual wave and ‘squiiiid’ (our version of a high five) to Cameron and Chris.

A Field Guide To

Do you organize a conference and are struggling to find great female speakers? You should have a look at A Field Guide To The Female Founders, Influencers and Deal Makers of the New York Tech and Media Scene.

The list was started by Sara Holoubek, CEO & Founder of Luminary Lab.

(I wish the name of the companies were links)

Olimpia Zagnoli



I admire Olimpia Zagnoli’s work. She is a 26 year old illustrator, based in Milan, Italy. She has an adorable logo, an amazing sense of color and, of course, drives a yellow Fiat. Best of all for us NYC peeps: We will get a chance to meet her at an upcoming AIGA/NY Small Talk event here in the big apple.

The Feast Conference

I am excited to be attending The Feast Conference by AlldayBuffet in the NewYorkTimes Center today. You can follow my live tweeting over at twitter.com/swissmiss and if you want to virtually attend, go and click on the livestream over at: http://www.livestream.com/alldaybuffet.