me news

body beeke

my (signed) copy of the recently published ‘body type’ book of the seminal ‘human alphabet’ project by anton beeke arrived last week, the book has been lavishly designed by ‘renĂ© knip’ and produced by ‘spinhex & industrie’ counting 120 pages in a box set divided into three volumes and separate tear sheets for creating your own messages using the alphabet…

the original images (originally published in black & white) have now been reproduced in colour and the numerals (not first included) have now been added, using naked black men in contrast to the naked white girls used for the original set from 1969; the book is a passing tribute to the project and beautifully made… the dutch are rightly proud of their (graphic) design heritage, however the whole package felt somehow perhaps a bit ‘over the top’ to me, too expensive and too pompous… beeke is rightly admired by many designers including myself but i can’t help feeling that the book would have had a more honest, maybe more ‘raw’ finish if beeke had made it himself…

for the dutch readers here is also a link to the article from the volkskrant newspaper

m / 26-09-2011 10:06 - tags: , , ,  

talker’s block

No one ever gets talker’s block. No one wakes up in the morning, discovers he has nothing to say and sits quietly, for days or weeks, until the muse hits, until the moment is right, until all the craziness in his life has died down.

Why then, is writer’s block endemic?

The reason we don’t get talker’s block is that we’re in the habit of talking without a lot of concern for whether or not our inane blather will come back to haunt us. Talk is cheap. Talk is ephemeral. Talk can be easily denied.

We talk poorly and then, eventually (or sometimes), we talk smart. We get better at talking precisely because we talk. We see what works and what doesn’t, and if we’re insightful, do more of what works. How can one get talker’s block after all this practice?

Writer’s block isn’t hard to cure.

Just write poorly. Continue to write poorly, in public, until you can write better.

I believe that everyone should write in public. Get a blog. Or use Squidoo or Tumblr or a microblogging site. Use an alias if you like. Turn off comments, certainly–you don’t need more criticism, you need more writing.

Do it every day. Every single day. Not a diary, not fiction, but analysis. Clear, crisp, honest writing about what you see in the world. Or want to see. Or teach (in writing). Tell us how to do something.

If you know you have to write something every single day, even a paragraph, you will improve your writing. If you’re concerned with quality, of course, then not writing is not a problem, because zero is perfect and without defects. Shipping nothing is safe.

The second best thing to zero is something better than bad. So if you know you have write tomorrow, your brain will start working on something better than bad. And then you’ll inevitably redefine bad and tomorrow will be better than that. And on and on.

Write like you talk. Often.

thank you for this, seth godin

m / 24-09-2011 16:13 - tags: ,  

green(er)land

…this is concrete evidence of how climate change is altering the face of the planet forever – and doing so at an alarming and accelerating rate…

the BBC reports on some errors in the new ‘times atlas of the world’, redrawing the coastline of greenland to show the receding ice levels, but incorrectly it would seem…

m / 20-09-2011 12:03 - tags: , , ,  

at a theater near you

the public (online) voting for this years dutch ‘cinema poster awards’ is open till late september; it is however, a pretty ‘average’ selection this year in my opinion… the link to the voting page is the red word ‘gestemd’ lower down, if you can find one you like… the above one was my choice

m / 17-09-2011 09:58 - tags: , ,  

size free

an amusing compilation of stretch -to-fit messages from my mate ‘yuri’

m / 16-09-2011 10:17 - tags: , , ,