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5 votes
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Death of a typeface
13 votes -
The design of the “Incalculable Loss” front page of The New York Times for Memorial Day, 2020
14 votes -
The Cooper Hewitt Digital Collection
7 votes -
The Apple Watch is five years old today: Original Apple Watch designer Imran Chaudri shares facts about its development and origins
@imranchaudhri: here's a reproduction of my original sketch for the home screen. the shape of the circular icon was driven by the clock that lived in the centre of what i originally called the dock. the crown gave the home screen a dimensionality, allowing you to scrub through layers of the ui.
7 votes -
Will the millennial aesthetic ever end?
12 votes -
What life indoors looks like in Tokyo’s cramped homes
8 votes -
How to encourage clicks without the shady tricks
3 votes -
How infectious disease defined the American bathroom
9 votes -
The curse of an open floor plan
3 votes -
Inspired design decisions with Otto Storch: When idea, copy, art and typography became inseparable
4 votes -
Open Platform and JAJA Architects construct Denmark's first wooden parking house, enabling Denmark reach its goal to become climate neutral in 2050
4 votes -
The BMW logo – meaning and history
4 votes -
Inside the collapse of $100 million home-design startup Homepolish
6 votes -
CF Møller Architects have revealed photos of the Kajstaden Tall Timber Building, which has recently completed in the city of Västerås and is Sweden's tallest timber building
6 votes -
The weird world of Apple Watch workout artwork
7 votes -
The secret history of the conversation chair
11 votes -
The Rubook bookcase is inspired by the legendary Rubik's Cube
6 votes -
Why are drink coasters flat?
A drink coaster goes under a glass or cup, and is intended to catch any condensation or spillage from the glass, to protect the tabletop underneath. But most coasters are flat.* Any liquid that...
A drink coaster goes under a glass or cup, and is intended to catch any condensation or spillage from the glass, to protect the tabletop underneath.
But most coasters are flat.* Any liquid that gathers on them can roll off the edges onto the table. Some coasters are made of a water-absorbing material, like cardboard or cork, but some are made of materials that repel water, like metal or ceramic or plastic.
I ask this because I recently discovered a small coaster-like tray with an upraised lip around the edge. Strictly speaking, it's not a coaster, but it's exactly the right size to be used as a coaster - and, with the upraised lip around the edge, it actually prevents liquid from escaping onto the table.
So why are coasters flat?
(I bought some of the lipped not-coasters to use as coasters. This design makes sense to me. And they happen to look nice as well.)
* It was only while researching coasters online prior to making this post that I discovered that some coasters have lips. Every coaster I've seen in real life is flat.
20 votes -
Establishing a type scale and hierarchy
6 votes -
The case for making low-tech 'dumb' cities instead of 'smart' ones
15 votes -
Copenhagen-based firm Henning Larsen Architects has proposed a low-rise neighborhood south of central Copenhagen using all-timber construction
4 votes -
Bjarke Ingels Group and WXY reimagine downtown Brooklyn
4 votes -
A writer’s prefab retreat sits lightly upon the land in Joshua Tree
5 votes -
Why 3D logos fell out of favor overnight
8 votes -
Letterpress business card printing with five Pantone colors
5 votes -
The iPod silhouettes
6 votes -
New LA museum spotlights Hollywood costumes, from Dracula cape to Spider Woman dress
7 votes -
Designing accessible color systems
27 votes -
This coastal prefab stands tall above rising sea levels
6 votes -
Where to put buttons on forms
12 votes -
Less human than human: The design philosophy of Steve Jobs
9 votes -
Chart Art Fair – It is time for something new in Danish design says Maria Bruun
3 votes -
A Welsh town will install anti-sex toilets that could spray users with water
12 votes -
Shade: It’s a civic resource, an index of inequality, and a requirement for public health. Shade should be a mandate for urban designers
11 votes -
How a new logo saved the city of Oslo $5 million a year
8 votes -
Monolithic concrete forms associated with brutalist architecture inspired the interiors of Axel Arigato's Copenhagen flagship store
4 votes -
Architects behind Lapee say pink spiral design could end gender toilet inequality
9 votes -
Sans serif, sans progressive policies: How campaign branding came to be a way for candidates to signal their progressive bona fides without actually having them.
7 votes -
The shape of things to come
7 votes -
Jony Ive, iPhone designer, announces Apple departure
18 votes -
‘I think therefore I cycle’: Fifty years of Dutch anti-car posters – in pictures
16 votes -
The corporate logo singularity: Against the creepy cheerfulness of a thousand smiling san serifs
14 votes -
The Frankfurt Kitchen changed how we cook—and live
8 votes -
Hand dryers vs. paper towels: The surprisingly dirty fight for the right to dry your hands
11 votes -
End the tyranny of Arial: The big internet platforms use the same fonts and backgrounds. Let’s make it interesting again.
15 votes -
The design of Apple's credit card
13 votes -
Why can’t we have decent toilet stalls?
22 votes -
The embroidered computer
10 votes -
How we lost our ambitions for the tech-enabled home
16 votes