Showing posts with label documenting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documenting. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Be Passionate about the day to day

Daily projects have become popular among designers and nondesigners alike. Taking a photo, making a painting, drawing an image, keeping track of certain data, or just simply writing down what you did. All of this creates the ability to compare one thing to another, reveals patterns, goes beyond human memory and pushes you to stick-to-it for a certain amount of time. These are just a few...there are so many who have done some seriously cool stuff :)

Here's a few that are really amazing:

Kate Bingaman-Burt
Obsessive Consumption
Kate is a designer/illustrator who draws something everyday that she has purchased. She's been doing this since 2006.
















One of the most popular daily projects right now is taking a picture every day - this one puts them all to shame

Jamie Livingston
Photo of the Day
Nineteen years of one photo a day, 1979-1997 starting while he was in college, and ending the day he died at age 41.

Blog post with some good info about the project.





















Nicholas Felton
Feltron Annual Reports
Sort of the reigning king of daily life documenting coupled with information visualization


















Stefan Bucher
Daily Monster
Blows ink onto paper and creates a monster out of it :)

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Be Passionate about Language

This mind-blowing TEDTalk by Deb Roy called The Birth of a Word shows his project recording his family's life in their home for 5 years and how he was able to track the language development of this newborn son as he learned to speak. Roy also uses spectacular mapping techniques to show various clusters of words and movement throughout the apartment.

Its a long video, but well worth your time.



Development of words beyond single individuals is still occurring every day. New words are created in our society, and sometimes adopted as official words. There are even Word of the Year competition based on their use or creation within that year. Here's Urban Dictionary's 2010 Word of the Year Top 10. They are more just funny popular sayings...but you get the idea.

















Studies have shown that the use of color words in language develop in similar orders no matter where or when this occurs. If a language only has two words for color, it will always be for black and white. If they have a third word, it is always for red. After that, the most common color words are for green and yellow. Sometimes however, a remote tribe in the desert might have 5 words for the color red before ever having a word for the color green.

A fun project by the Oxford Dictionary is called Save the Words. Its an initiative to get some words back into common language that have faded out of use. You can pan around the page to see all these crazy words you've never heard of (if you sound is on, you'll hear that they are in fact begging you to choose them). If you click a word, you can see its definition. You can also create an account and adopt a word. You must swear "to use the word in conversation and correspondence as frequently as possible to the best of your ability" :)