(Source: a-cook-rip)
(Source: puretypography, via ttdrunk)
Amazing work from Antwerp based studio Ines Cox.
(Source: thisiscatalogue, via ttdrunk)
At the heart of the original Mundane Manifesto is a willful pragmatism—a skepticism aimed at the impulse to abstract “the future,” as if there were not many different possible futures—as if the future is something that happens regardless of our participation. These abstractions take many forms, from the overly optimistic agendas that imagine “post-” eras, to the consensus futures that are incredibly bland, to the persistent future that conflates technological progress (“innovation”) with all progress. As a counterproposal to these assumptions, the manifesto reemphasizes the present as a starting point to the future, underlining the sense of wonder that is possible only in the mundane.
Present-ism by Emmet Byrne and Alex DeArmond
(via yaherd)
Unfun, Nuremberg (DE)
Unfun was founded in Nuremberg in 2011 by Michael Seibert, Simon Niedermeier and Wolfgang Schöffel.
They are a design studio specialising in integrated Communication, Art Direction and Digital development. Combining classic design principles with the power of new technologies, they create engaging, contemporary and relevant solutions.
The 3 designers studied in Nuremberg, Würzburg, Zurich, Berlin and Leipzig and gained work expierence by working for agencies like Strichpunkt (Stuttgart), State and StudioAnti (Berlin) and Marc Kremers (London)
Bohuy Kim
Bohuy Kim is a multidisciplinary graphic designer and media artist based in South Korea.
He received his BFA in Film,Tv and Multimedia from Sungkyunkwan university in Seoul. He engages in rigorous creative exploration and collaborates with various artists. Currently, he runs a design studio Printlab.
(Source: strouzas, via gradientdelay)