Legal Schmegal

Freelancers Rejoice! By popular demand a sample contract has been posted in the ofazomi.org resources section (here!) complete with links to addendums and clauses that delight the most persnickety code-a-phile.

Posted in Resources, Vocation & Profession

Blue Ribbon Day

Design Sponge

November 25th, 2009
made with love: horse ribbons

horsestill1
horsestill2
After last week’s “living in” post on my childhood favorite movie National Velvet, I’ve been in horse mode. Homemade horse ribbons make perfect party favors, stocking stuffers or little surprises for the prize winners in your life. Bonus- they are great for using up an extra ribbon stash. –amy m.

CLICK HERE for the full project instructions after the jump!

What you’ll need:

– several yards of ribbon in varying widths, I used about a 1 ¼ yards max. of each

– fast drying craft glue

– large button

– card stock

– scissors

– stapler

– iron

– corkboard and pins (optional)

1. After cutting a circle out of card stock for the backing, take a yard or so of ribbon and start to pleat it so that it makes a circular shape. This can be tricky, so I worked on top of a corkboard and pinned each pleat down as I worked. Gently steam with iron so the pleats remain when pins are removed.

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2. Staple your pleated ribbon around the edge of you backing to secure in place. Hide your raw edge behind the fold of your first pleat.

horsestill4

3. Repeat with narrower ribbon for inner ring if desired.

4. Cover a large button with ribbon using craft glue on the back and glue to center.

5. Cut and glue down ribbon tails to the back.

If you liked these prize-worthy ribbon making instructions, you may also like making this wallet, etching your designs and illustrations into glass, crafting your own facial hair or one of these other bits of craftiness! Love, Ofazomi

Posted in Craftiness, Repost From Cited Source, Stuff To Do

Lloyd Schwartz Bauhaus Primer

From Bauhaus, A Visionary Mix Of Art And Industry

“Complete mastery is impossible without precision,” Kandinsky wrote in 1926. His own paintings combined exacting mathematics with a boundary-breaking, seemingly uncontrolled sense of fantasy. All the products of the Bauhaus, whether commercial or strictly idealistic, combined precision with the wildest imagination. Perhaps no place more than in New York, in the very building that houses this show, do we see how much the Bauhaus produced a vision of the very world we are now living in. And the illuminating and thoroughly detailed catalogue (it weighs five pounds) gives you a pretty substantial impression of how profoundly prescient those artists were.

December 14, 2009

For many years, there was an iconic painting hanging in the lobby of the Museum of Modern Art: a picture of busy people going up and down the stairs at the Bauhaus — that noble experiment in Germany between the world wars that in many ways ushered us into the modern world. For 14 years, under its various directors, beginning with architect Walter Gropius and ending with architect Mies van der Rohe, the Bauhaus — or “House of Building” — showed us what it meant to be modern. In art, that meant a departure from realism into the realm of abstract paintings and sculpture. But it also meant a departure from bourgeois excess — having simple but comfortable furniture with clean lines, in elegant, efficient, and inexpensive surroundings. At the Bauhaus, art and industry were not necessarily enemies. Art could make eloquent use of industrial materials, and industrial materials, down to kitchen utensils and teapots, ashtrays and lighting fixtures, could be as beautiful and elegant as works of art — in fact, were works of art. Now at the Museum of Modern Art, which is itself a direct product of the Bauhaus frame of mind, Oscar Schlemmer’s painting of that Bauhaus stairwell has a particular place of honor in an astonishing exhibit — Bauhaus 1919-1933: Workshops for Modernity — an exhibit that’s devoted to every aspect of that great achievement.

This exhibit isn’t like most art shows. It’s like entering a whole world. Everywhere you turn you’re struck with a dizzying array of paintings and sculptures; films and photographs; wall hangings; chairs and desks and lamps; kids’ toys and architectural plans; books, pamphlets, and posters with startlingly streamlined and colorful calligraphy. Some of the major 20th-century artists participated in the Bauhaus experiment — like Paul Klee and Wasily Kandinsky — working alongside some marvelous artists few people outside of Germany are familiar with. This show has exciting examples of all of them, including the Museum of Modern Art’s most famous Paul Klee, the Twittering Machine, that slyly comic mixture of nature and mechanics, and the less well-known, almost sinister hand puppets (one of them a self-portrait) that Klee designed for his children. There’s the Hungarian artist Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s astonishing 1930 electric sculpture machine, a conglomeration of glass and metal and plastic and wood — sieves and graters, tracks and tubing — that’s not only striking in itself but casts the must seductive and elusive shadows as it rotates. If you’re familiar with the famous Breuer office chair, you’d be surprised at how many different models Breuer designed, and even more surprised by his use of plushly colorful fabric in his unique African chair, a glorious throne, both primitive and magisterial. It was long thought lost, but the curators located it and it’s on view. The curators seem to have thought of everything. They had the walls in each gallery painted with original Bauhaus colors — not only the expected shades of gray and white, but also peach and lime. If you know Josef Albers Homage to the Square paintings, you may still be surprised to see him work out his color theories in brilliant little stained glass panels. These Bauhaus color experiments also connected to music: the 12 notes of the musical scale reflected in a 12-color spectrum.

Posted in Course Related, Design History, Design Theory, Education, Repost From Cited Source, Resources, Visual Concepts

Pantone 14-0848

credit: www.djibnet.com

credit: www.djibnet.com

This odd exerpt was part of a longer piece that came out of Seattle’s The Stranger, a weekly. As for eye color being linked to color perception… cough, cough, bullsh*t. Uh hem.

Color Theory

A century ago, more than half of all Americans had blue eyes. By 1950, that number was down to one in three. In 2006, only 16 percent of all Americans had blue eyes. Why, then, do almost 90 percent of PSUBS members have blue eyes? These aren’t made-up numbers. This is the real science.

And what if the color of your own eyes influences the colors you perceive? What if blue-eyed people perceive color differently than those around them? If there were certain colors, certain colors that were perhaps complementary to blue, certain colors that resonated with the rods and cones of blue-eyed people in a way that brown and green rods and cones can’t detect… If there were such a color…

It would almost surely be Pantone 14-0848.

Leatrice Eiseman, director of the Pantone Color Institute, calls it Mimosa. I call it Submarine Yellow. It was the 2009 Pantone Color of the Year™. “The color exemplifies the warmth and nurturing quality of the sun,” Eiseman said matter-of-factly, like she was explaining a math equation. “It speaks to enlightenment, as it is a hue that sparks imagination and innovation.”

Full disclosure: Eiseman and I have had dinner together. At her place on Bainbridge Island. It was not a date.

The draw to submarines has something to do with Pantone 14-0848. It must. That scuba yellow. That 1962 deep Jacques Cousteau yellow that says, confidently and with a slight French accent, “Submareeene… rebreazer… skeendiving…”

Posted in Amusement, Course Related, Design Theory, Repost From Cited Source

You knew Donner and Dasher and Prancer and Vixen.

It’s not too late for a bit of last minute shopping and who doesn’t like Santa’s reindeer? These snappy stickers and so much more are available from BlueQ. courtesy of the talented team of designers at Modern Dog Design. Woof! The real deal can be had at ExoticMeatSales.com. Incidentally, mutton is now considered as exotic. Reindeer gyros anyone?

Reindeer Steaks 1

Reindeer Steaks 2

Thanks to Kortni B. for the cat butt reminder!

Posted in Amusement, Course Related, Visual Concepts