A Genius of Book Design Creates a Tome With No Ink | Wired.com


A Genius of Book Design Creates a Tome With No Ink | Wired Design | Wired.com

Irma Boom designed a book for the perfume Chanel No. 5. Image: Jonathan Leijonhufvud

It’s not an exaggeration to say that Irma Boom has designed some of the coolest books ever put on a bookshelf. Throughout her career, the Amsterdam-based designer has made more than 250 volumes, and a staggering 20 percent have found a home in a permanent collection at MoMA. They really are works of art, though Boom herself is vehemently against calling them so. “I do not consider and approach my work as art. I do push the boundaries of bookmaking, but it is never art,” she says. “Books are not unique—it is commissioned work, it is a reproduction.”

Ok, so maybe art isn’t quite the right word, but what Boom creates is often more than just a book as we typically know it. A book by Boom is an experience, an object to be appreciated in its own right, even when its technically just a vehicle for another artist. Most recently, she completed a book commissioned by Chanel, the Parisian fashion house, for its Chanel No. 5 perfume. And in classic Boom style, it’s not what you’d expect. The 300-page book has no ink—each of the crisp white pages is embossed with a drawing or quotation that helps the story of Gabrielle Chanel unfold. It’s clean, understated and ephemeral, and somehow still totally engrossing.

Read more: A Genius of Book Design Creates a Tome With No Ink | Wired Design | Wired.com.

Upstagram Is A Flying Raspberry Pi That Publishes Live Pictures On Instagram | TechCrunch


What do Instagram, the Raspberry Pi and the movie “Up” have in common? When you mash all these things together, you get Upstagram, a neat hack that the Hackerloop team just unveiled.

First, the team made a replica of the house in “Up” using paper and foam. It was just big enough to fit a Raspberry Pi and its camera, a battery and a 3G hotspot. The Raspberry Pi, an open source and very cheap mini-computer to tweak, experiment and try new things with, is a hacker’s dream.

Then, the team used about 90 helium balloons to make the house fly above Paris’ landscape. While Instagram is only available on iOS and Android, they reverse-engineered the posting process to transform the Raspberry Pi into an Instagram-taking machine.

Read more: Upstagram Is A Flying Raspberry Pi That Publishes Live Pictures On Instagram | TechCrunch.

The Hummingbird Drone | PBS Video


The Hummingbird Drone | Watch NOVA Online | PBS Video.

How Can I Make Quality Videos and Short Films on a Budget? | LifeHacker


Dear Lifehacker,

I want to get started making some YouTube videos, and maybe even a short film, but I’m not sure what I need to get. I also don’t want to spend a ton of money. How can I get started on a budget?P

Sincerely,
Aspiring Auteur

Post discusses 6 steps for making videos and short films on a budget.

via How Can I Make Quality Videos and Short Films on a Budget? | LifeHacker.

Everyone in Tech Should Read Fiction. Here’s Why | Mashable


For many in today’s tech world, novel reading is a luxury — something you might do once or twice a year, if you’re lucky. It’s often the first thing that goes out the window when times are busy.

Perhaps, if you’re in the industry, you’ve convinced yourself that fiction doesn’t matter. Isn’t your reading time better spent with Flipboard or Zite or Instapaper, catching up on all those important articles and assorted long reads? 

But if you’re purely in the nonfiction realm, you’re starving yourself and your work of an important resource.

Read the full story: Everyone in Tech Should Read Fiction. Here’s Why | Mashable

You may also like: Neil Gaiman: Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming | theguardian

5 Innovative Ways for Job Seekers to Stand Out | Mashable


  1. Find Ways to Let Your Creativity Shine
  2. Think Outside the Box
  3. Social Media Espionage
  4. Study the Company’s Top Performers
  5. Be Proactive

Read: 5 Innovative Ways for Job Seekers to Stand Out | Mashable

Design And Print Your Own Moleskines With Paper’s New “Book” | Co.Design


Paper is an amazing iPad app–and one of our Innovation By Design nominees–because its team at FiftyThree cracked the code of making creation a simple, beautiful experience on tablets. There’s just one problem: Paper isn’t actually paper; it’s a screen.

Today, FiftyThree and Moleskine are revealing a solution called Book. For $40, you will be able to turn your Paper sketches into a custom Moleskine print. The 15-page, accordion-style, handmade “Book” marks the first time that the iconic Moleskine has ever allowed cover customization. It’s also a potential peek into the future strategy of FiftyThree, a company that hasn’t been shy about their plan to expand their purview into a whole suite of creative productivity apps.

Read: Design And Print Your Own Moleskines With Paper’s New “Book” | Co.Design | business + design.

DragonCon Carpet Cosplayers Copyright | The Mary Sue


How about a Monday morning diversion?

At DragonCon last month, a couple of cosplayers decided to sidestep the usual fare of superheroes and cartoon characters in favor of dressing up as the carpet at the Marriott hotel where the con takes place. Yup, there was carpet-colored camo. That is a real thing that now exists. Naturally, other people wanted to emulate the design, but, alas, this psychedelic carpet army was not to be – because Courtisan Inc., the company that designed the original rug, issued a Cease and Desist soon after the design went up.

Carpet Cosplay

Volpin Props, the cosplay designer, posted on their facebook page about the incident and received almost 300 comments, ranging from serious discussion of copyright and intellectual property to expressions of surprise that anyone would admit to having designed such an ugly carpet. Still, Volpin Props has gracefully stated that they are “in complete agreement with [Courtisans] decision,” so it looks like anyone looking to blend in with the carpeting in the future will have to make their own costume. Or maybe they should try the wallpaper? Carpet controversy aside, I think that we all can rest easy knowing that this photo exists:

Carpet Cosplay

The moral of the story is A. Cosplayers are will always find new ways to be creative and awesome and B.You can’t sell carpets that don’t belong to you, no matter how ugly they are.

via DragonCon Carpet Cosplayers Copyright | The Mary Sue.

Creativity Is Really Just Persistence, And Science Can Prove It | Fast Company


What’s amazing is that advances in science have allowed us to get a better idea as to why better ideas come after jumping into our workflow, rather than waiting for sudden inspiration to strike.

The full story: Creativity Is Really Just Persistence, And Science Can Prove It | Fast Company | Business + Innovation.

20 Tools to Showcase Your Portfolio | Mashable


Working in a creative industry often means that you need to present your work on a global stage, using an attractive and professional platform. A great portfolio can help you land clients while building your brand and network, so it’s essential to get it right.

However, creating a beautiful, functional portfolio can be complicated and time-consuming, especially if you have no prior design or coding knowledge. Not to worry — there are plenty of online tools that can help you get your portfolio up and running in no time.

Tools reviewed:

  1. Carbonmade
  2. Behance
  3. Dribbble
  4. Dunked
  5. Coroflot
  6. Viewbook
  7. Portfolio Box
  8. deviantART
  9. Shown’d
  10. Subfolio
  11. Crevado
  12. Portfoliopen
  13. Jobrary
  14. design:related
  15. Krop
  16. Cargo Collective
  17. Brushd
  18. Sliding Boxes
  19. Portfolio Lounge
  20. Folio24

via 20 Tools to Showcase Your Portfolio | Mashable.