-
5 votes
-
What are your favourite transport maps?
As a railfan and a graphic designer, the first thing I check out when in a new town with public transit is their transit map. You can tell a lot about a city by how they represent themselves on a...
As a railfan and a graphic designer, the first thing I check out when in a new town with public transit is their transit map. You can tell a lot about a city by how they represent themselves on a transit map, and I myself have designed more maps than I can count. What's the map of your city look like? Do you have a personal favourite you think is really unknown? Any maps that you just want to rant about because of how terrible it is?
My personal favourite transit map is Constantine Konovalov's Paris Metro Map, I just love how effortlessly it weaves the lines throughout the Peripherique, and how it's not afraid to break its own established rules on angles and circles. Honorable mentions go to the London Tube and Rail map (an absolute classic), and the Mexico City Metro, which assigns a unique symbol to every station for the benefit of passengers who can't read or write.
Also, designers, feel free to share your transit diagrams! I miss r/transitdiagrams a lot and would love to see your work, fictional, redesign or otherwise!
18 votes -
Comparing my favorite fonts for reading and writing code
37 votes -
Patagonia helps Samsung redesign washing machines to help reduce microfiber pollution
46 votes -
How this train beat the plane: The TGV story
8 votes -
Design for the web without Figma
7 votes -
Where do you share your art with the world?
Where do you share the art that you make with the world? Do you use a social media site? A personal website? Do you keep it all to yourself? Is your art something that can't be shared online so...
Where do you share the art that you make with the world? Do you use a social media site? A personal website? Do you keep it all to yourself? Is your art something that can't be shared online so easily?
35 votes -
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom | re:View
7 votes -
Will AI really make graphic designers obsolete?
15 votes -
How are you reacting to the current climate in the product design and UX space?
I have been a product designer and experience architect since before “UX” even meant anything. I’ve never wanted for work, and I’ve always been confident in my skills as a leader both on the...
I have been a product designer and experience architect since before “UX” even meant anything.
I’ve never wanted for work, and I’ve always been confident in my skills as a leader both on the product and business strategy side.
But especially recently, I’ve started to feel some tremors I’ve never felt before:
- A massive amount of young talent has flooded the industry via UX programs and boot camps - and much of them are quite talented!
- Layoffs have further upped the available workers
- AI and Automation have made good designers even more efficient, and even inexperienced designers can now move at the speed of light.
I also have some personal situations at play:
- I took the last few years to launch and grow my own product business - scaling that eventually to an exit. So I’ve been out of the “product designer” game a bit - as I’ve been immersed in everything that comes with being a founder and startup growth.
- I now have a family - I can’t grind as hard as I used to.
All this gives me some qualms about the ability to find work in the future.
With an industry now flooded in talent, and AI that commodifies and democratizes UI design - making it easier than ever to spit out good design - is there job security for product designers the next few years?
What does that look like? How will pay be affected? Where will the opportunity be?
14 votes -
Is it time to do away with “good taste?”
8 votes -
Typography 2024: For America! For America’s best
7 votes -
Interesting project to create a more humanizing helmet using objects associated with fragility
10 votes -
Why Lego won – the competition looked identical, so how did they pull it off?
10 votes -
Why is everything so ugly? The mid in fake midcentury modern
26 votes -
The Huussi toilet in Finland's pavilion at the 2023 Venice Architecture Biennale disposes of waste without any water
7 votes -
The story of the first video game cartridge
9 votes -
What our utensils say about our culture
7 votes -
Gallery of physical visualizations
5 votes -
The icon sets proposed in the icon contest
8 votes -
Does adding story to open world survival games work well? An agonising deep-dive into the strange game that is The Forest.
5 votes -
How culture made Japanese internet design "weird"
6 votes -
Design notes on the 2023 Wikipedia redesign
9 votes -
The Museum of Failure’s latest exhibition is an epic portrait of failures big and small—from the Ford Edsel, to CNN+
4 votes -
Adam Savage's advice for pricing freelance work
6 votes -
Infrastructure that looks like science fiction (photos)
21 votes -
The UGHZ Principle
6 votes -
The age of average
8 votes -
A gallery of Sony product design going back decades
5 votes -
The olympic pictograms are miniature design masterpieces
9 votes -
Why Top Gun’s sound design is Oscar worthy
3 votes -
Please share tools/tips/platforms for making a personal website
I figured that more than complaining about the dearth of random and weird websites, I might ought to contribute something. I almost went to MassArt for new media installations. In those days I was...
I figured that more than complaining about the dearth of random and weird websites, I might ought to contribute something. I almost went to MassArt for new media installations. In those days I was a web monkey with a solid design bent and very orthogonal thinking. I still have a smidgeon of the thinking, we'll see what I have left of my design skills, but my tech skills are hopeless. Back then my tools were freehand, dreamweaver, bbedit, photoshop, flash, Perl, Solaris, mySQL. My last website was done with rudimentary css.
I would like to get right to the design and expression phase, I don't have an inclination to dive into coding. I also don't want to worry about security. I'll throw a few bucks down.
I'm still comfortable in photoshop, but would like a more fun tool. I cannot stand illustrator, and would love to have a vigorous chat with the folks at Adobe who chose to promote it and shelve freehand. Better yet, an even more vigorous chat with the moron at the FTC who approved Adobe's buyout of macromedia. You can bet that will be on the website. Is there any equivalent to freehand? I saw the post about a free, online illustration tool that came through recently, that might be a smidge rudimentary. What about dreamweaver? And how to publish? I don't care to learn about content management, scripting, databases, etc. if I can avoid it.
Bonus if there are AI tools to help.
5 votes -
How the inventor of the troll doll missed out on a fortune
5 votes -
The forgotten story of Modulex – Lego's lost cousin
7 votes -
Ecommerce and corporate websites need to adopt some minimalism and de-clutter
3 votes -
Unpopular opinion: Wikipedia's old look was much better than the new one
I say that after throwing some caution to air because I understand that every new thing has some initial resistance or pushback due to the "past comfort zone" effect. But having said that, I feel...
I say that after throwing some caution to air because I understand that every new thing has some initial resistance or pushback due to the "past comfort zone" effect.
But having said that, I feel the aesthetics of the old site was much better than the new one. But then again, I'm from the old-school world who also prefers old reddit to the new one in browsing experience, so my opinion could be biased! But even considering the modern web design, don't you think the black icons on the top right have a somewhat odd look? And the "21 languages" feels a bit verbose, the I10N icon already conveys what that dropdown is about? And finally, that scrollable sidebar on the left looks a tad ugly?
I just hope this is just a beta stage or something of Wikipedia's new version and a better one will evolve soon! But that's just one humble unpopular opinion, me thinks!
15 votes -
Wikipedia has spent years on a barely noticeable redesign
18 votes -
Chainsaw Man! I made a custom Denji doll
1 vote -
Arne Aksel: ‘Denmark had become this decorative no-go land. We've been in a white or gray or beige box for what – 20, 25 years? I think people have had enough.’
5 votes -
Inside one of Japan's tiniest houses
6 votes -
Help me understand how I feel about a particular style of watch
There's a type of watch that's very popular. It has a clean, clear, design. It's definitely a classic. I have mixed feelings about it because of the origins of the design. The watch is big. I has...
There's a type of watch that's very popular. It has a clean, clear, design. It's definitely a classic. I have mixed feelings about it because of the origins of the design.
The watch is big. I has a black dial with white numbers and index marks. At the 12 o'clock position there's a triangle. There's plenty of lume on the dial. They usually have a leather strap, and that strap often has two rivets.
Sometimes the dial has two index rings, the inner ring has hour markings and the outer ring has minute markings.
IWC makes the most well known example: https://www.iwc.com/en/watch-collections/pilot-watches/iw329301-big-pilots-watch-43.html
There are lots of homages:
https://www.watchshop.com/watches/mens-sekonda-aviator-watch-3347.pdp
https://mwcwatches.com/products/vintage-ww2-style-german-pilots-watch-1
This style of watch is called "B Uhr", or "B Uhren"and you get many results if you use that search term. It's German, and it's an abbreviation for "Beobachtungs-uhren" which means "observation watch".
My problem with the watch is that is that it was specifically designed for the Luftwaffe in WW2.
https://monochrome-watches.com/the-history-of-the-pilot-watch-part-five-b-uhr/
After the war other airforces, including the British RAF, started using very similar watches.
Most watch sellers do not celebrate the Nazi history of the watch. But some do: https://b-uhr.com/en/collection/b-uhr-luftwaffe-flieger-chronograph.html
So, I don't know how I feel about this watch. Can its clean design be appreciated when I know of its Nazi link? Can I separate the creator from the product?
8 votes -
Two-Face, Batman Forever - Sculpture timelapse
3 votes -
What went wrong with the London Tube map? | Unfinished London
9 votes -
In 2017, I made an unofficial transit diagram covering the Oslo region in Norway – now, five years later, it's time for a revisit
4 votes -
Design collective Andra Formen has created furniture from electric scooters fished out of the canals of Malmö
4 votes -
King Charles III's new cypher is a design classic
14 votes -
Why food commercials cost hundreds of thousands of dollars | Big Business
2 votes -
Making of mathematical instruments - transforming a public domain book into a website
14 votes -
On writing better error messages
6 votes -
Variations of Star Trek TOS computers
4 votes