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If you’re ever in Lynchburg, VA., visit this coffee shop. Excellent coffee, reading material, and regulars.
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If you’re planning a trip to NY, Seattle, Portland, or Palm Springs, do yourself a favor and book a room in Ace Hotel. Browse the website and check out the rooms! Having stayed in a many-a-hostel around Europe, I have a sincere appreciation for the cleverly simple, pleasantly artistic style exuded in many of these places. I have yet to stay at Ace Hotel, so I cannot give a full review, but from what I’ve seen so far, it has definitely piqued my interest.
(Thanks to Peach for finding this one).
~ Matt
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It’s always nice to see clever, bold artwork incorporated into everyday life:
http://www.moillusions.com/2008/08/eureka-tower-carpark-3d-chalk-drawings.html
~Matt
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Chris Jordan is a photographer, and his exhibit entitled “Running The Numbers: An American self-portrait” consists of photos that depict staggering statistics about America. It’s one thing to read a statistic as a number, but to see it depicted in a photograph is a shockingly different experience.
Follow this link to view the exhibit:
http://www.chrisjordan.com/current_set2.php
~Matt
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This artist creates 3-dimensional, plastic-bag sculptures that are attached to subway vents on the side-walk. They take their shape each time a draft is blown upwards from the tunnels below. It is fascinating to watch!
~Matt
Filed under: Artwork, graphic design | Tags: chili peppers, graphic design, script
Cool line from a Chili Peppers song. Previously posted music video was also an inspiration.
so simple and beautiful, love the all black background with light poking through in the beginning.
*brad
Filed under: Artwork, graphic design | Tags: family, family knot, tattoo, trinity
This is updated version of a tattoo idea I was messing around with awhile ago. It is the first letter of all of the members of my immediate family arranged into a script knot. The knot starts with a lowercase “G” for my dad Gary and each subsequent letter is rotated 90 degrees. “C” is for my mom Carol, “B” for Brad (that’s me) and “J” for my brother Jeremy.
The concept is loosely based off of the biblical idea of the trinity. In the trinity the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one, yet at the same time individuals. The knot design visually reads as a single graphic statement made up of smaller individual letters upon a closer look.
*brad
This font is rad. I have been wanting to get this as a tattoo for awhile. It is the first verse of the hymn It is Well With my Soul written by Horatio G. Spafford. The story of how it was written is very moving. I have re-posted it here from another website.
Horatio Gates Spafford
1828-1888
Born: October 20, 1828, North Troy, New York.
Died: October 16, 1888, Jerusalem, Israel, of malaria.
HYMN HISTORY:
This hymn was written by a Chicago lawyer, Horatio G. Spafford. You might think to write a worship song titled,
‘It is well with my soul’, you would indeed have to be a rich, successful Chicago lawyer. But the words,
“When sorrows like sea billows roll … It is well with my soul”, were not written during the happiest period of
Spafford’s life. On the contrary, they came from a man who had suffered almost unimaginable personal tragedy.
Horatio G. Spafford and his wife, Anna, were pretty well-known in 1860’s Chicago. And this was not just because
of Horatio’s legal career and business endeavors. The Spaffords were also prominent supporters and close
friends of D.L. Moody, the famous preacher. In 1870, however, things started to go wrong. The Spaffords’ only
son was killed by scarlet fever at the age of four. A year later, it was fire rather than fever that struck. Horatio
had invested heavily in real estate on the shores of Lake Michigan. In 1871, every one of these holdings was
wiped out by the great Chicago Fire.
Aware of the toll that these disasters had taken on the family, Horatio decided to take his wife and four
daughters on a holiday to England. And, not only did they need the rest — DL Moody needed the help. He was
traveling around Britain on one of his great evangelistic campaigns. Horatio and Anna planned to join Moody in
late 1873. And so, the Spaffords traveled to New York in November, from where they were to catch the French
steamer ‘Ville de Havre’ across the Atlantic. Yet just before they set sail, a last-minute business development
forced Horatio to delay. Not wanting to ruin the family holiday, Spafford persuaded his family to go as planned.
He would follow on later. With this decided, Anna and her four daughters sailed East to Europe while Spafford
returned West to Chicago. Just nine days later, Spafford received a telegram from his wife in Wales. It read:
“Saved alone.”
On November 2nd 1873, the ‘Ville de Havre’ had collided with ‘The Lochearn’, an English vessel. It sank in only
12 minutes, claiming the lives of 226 people. Anna Spafford had stood bravely on the deck, with her daughters
Annie, Maggie, Bessie and Tanetta clinging desperately to her. Her last memory had been of her baby being
torn violently from her arms by the force of the waters. Anna was only saved from the fate of her daughters by a
plank which floated beneath her unconscious body and propped her up. When the survivors of the wreck had
been rescued, Mrs. Spafford’s first reaction was one of complete despair. Then she heard a voice speak to her,
“You were spared for a purpose.” And she immediately recalled the words of a friend, “It’s easy to be grateful
and good when you have so much, but take care that you are not a fair-weather friend to God.”
Upon hearing the terrible news, Horatio Spafford boarded the next ship out of New York to join his bereaved
wife. Bertha Spafford (the fifth daughter of Horatio and Anna born later) explained that during her father’s
voyage, the captain of the ship had called him to the bridge. “A careful reckoning has been made”, he said, “and
I believe we are now passing the place where the de Havre was wrecked. The water is three miles deep.” Horatio
then returned to his cabin and penned the lyrics of his great hymn.
The words which Spafford wrote that day come from 2 Kings 4:26. They echo the response of the Shunammite
woman to the sudden death of her only child. Though we are told “her soul is vexed within her”, she still
maintains that ‘It is well.” And Spafford’s song reveals a man whose trust in the Lord is as unwavering as hers
was.
*brad
Filed under: Artwork, graphic design | Tags: graphic design, graphic identity
This is a little graphic identity project I did for my bible study group.
(Matt let me know if you think any changes need to be made when you get a chance to look at this.)
*brad





