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Brand Thoughts: Fashionista

After publishing with a blackletter logo since 2007, Fashionista decided it was time to reconside and redesign its stoic face as well as swap its back-end CMS from Movable Type to Wordpress.

The old logo was this oversized, domineering, gothic lettering thing that said “spiky, aggressive, old-school news brand.” That’s not what Fashionista is. The editors of Fashionista are excellent journalists who will be critical when it’s called for, but they’re also unashamedly fashion lovers. They might poke fun from time to time, but they’re not spiky or unnecessarily aggressive. And they’re also inherently new-generation when it comes to how they go about their business — they use a blog platform, Flip cameras, smartphones and various social media to deliver their content and engage their audience — so unless we were being very ironic with the gothic, old-school newspaper font thing it just wasn’t really appropriate. I’m also a big believer that the logo and furniture on the site should be a little subservient to the content — it’s the content that engages and the content travels well beyond the site too — so we also needed something a little less imposing.
— Jonah Bloom, CEO/Editor-in-Chief, Breaking Media

More treatments of the new logo at Brand New.

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ChatRoulette. Nexting by the numbers.

An entertaining short film by Casey Neistat, the other half of the Neistat Brothers, on the infographics of ChatRoulette. He conducts an ethnographic study examining the genders, ages, types of users, and the rate of getting ‘nexted’. Naturally the majority of the chats are from boys and pervs.

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non plus one

opening ceremony s/s 2010

coconut records

directed by gia coppola

filmed in la

nice to see the work at black frame lives on

“Aftermath of the Haiti Earthquake,” infographic created by Emily Schwartzman, depicts the human toll of the earthquake and the scope of the tremors.

Total humanitarian dollars equaled at $1.55B, total humanitarian assistance equaled $2.35 B, and $800 M in uncommitted pledges. My neighborhood Western Union knock-off in Crown Heights operated day and night with hoards of people trying to get money transferred to the Carribbean. Text to Haiti raised $10M. It was extremely popular, and phone companies became the activator for pledges and donations. Imagine the future of financial platforms. What other ways can we innovate to get money transferred faster and more efficiently. Who will be the next activator in a global disaster as the world watches?

the future of the library

Link: the future of the library

A California College of the Arts professor asked his architectural class to explore what a library might look like in the future, if information were no longer accessed through books. The results include a Google Book Portal, Public Access Wifi envelopes, and more.

[via caleb/bldgblog]



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