-
10 votes
-
Tour of 'The One', a $500m mansion in Bel-Air
14 votes -
The Mysterious Life of UX Designers
3 votes -
Sexist and offensive vintage ads that would never fly today, 1940-1980
23 votes -
Neuomorphism — A passing fad or is it here to stay?
12 votes -
The mystery of the "same sky" postcards
4 votes -
Housing in Alaska can’t survive climate change. This group is trying a new model.
3 votes -
Recommend me a version control system for design assets (primarily Photoshop & Illustrator)
I'm a software developer working with a small team, and our Google Drive folder tree of UI assets/illustrations/app icons/etc. is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with. Aside from proper...
I'm a software developer working with a small team, and our Google Drive folder tree of UI assets/illustrations/app icons/etc. is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with. Aside from proper versioning, symlinks would be a major plus. Both are kinda-sorta possible with GDrive, but not in a reliable way.
I'm happy to take on a reasonable amount of management myself, although the easier it is for the designers themselves to work with the software, the better. Paid solutions are fine, although open source would be preferable (even as a hosted service) to avoid vendor lock-in down the line.
My instinct is to go with git/GitHub on the basis that we're already deeply familiar with it from the dev side, the GitHub desktop app isn't too onerous for non-techies, and we're already paying for it. That said, I'd be very interested in anyone's real-world experience of git for multiple gigs of 10-200MB binary files. I've heard that it's not especially well suited, although that might be out of date knowledge?
Beyond that, I'm open to almost anything. I'm kind of surprised that I haven't been able to find a single "gold standard" piece of software here, in the way that git is for developers, but maybe I haven't been searching well enough? Any pointers in the right direction or stories of what has/hasn't worked for your teams would be a huge help!
17 votes -
The real first 3D printed buildings (1930s)
3 votes -
Happily sharing that one of my all-time favorite sites, LooksLikeGoodDesign, is (partially) back online
7 votes -
Gov. Gavin Newsom abolishes most single-family zoning in California
21 votes -
Nissin to sell a fork specially designed for its cup ramen
17 votes -
Three strange river crossings
4 votes -
Copenhagen is great… but it’s not Amsterdam
8 votes -
The history of tie-dye
6 votes -
Typography on the web
3 votes -
Questions about Próspera, answered
4 votes -
Why Britain's newbuilds are so ugly
7 votes -
Plans for $400-billion new city in the American desert unveiled
21 votes -
IKEA goes glam rock with Zandra Rhodes collaboration – British fashion designer teams up with Swedish furniture chain after being inspired by lockdown
3 votes -
Linear Clock: Solar - a looser experience of time
6 votes -
Twitter’s new font and The Last of Us Part II: An accessibility lesson to be learned
8 votes -
Want to get rid of San Francisco's most toxic monument to racism and segregation? End single-family zoning.
14 votes -
Sucks to be him! How Henry the vacuum cleaner became an accidental design icon.
10 votes -
Mastering the basics of icon design
5 votes -
The government unknowingly commissioned furry art to promote the Tokyo Olympics
26 votes -
Wood construction and the risk of fire
14 votes -
Why it's hard to innovate in construction
9 votes -
Looking for more home and building related content!
I'm really not sure if I posted this in the right place, but I have been watching the Youtube channel "The B1M" and the guy's other channel "Tomorrow's Build" and I really like his type of...
I'm really not sure if I posted this in the right place, but I have been watching the Youtube channel "The B1M" and the guy's other channel "Tomorrow's Build" and I really like his type of content. I've also been watching tv shows about homes and the types of people who live in what homes in which parts of the country (Denmark). I also watched a couple of episodes of "The World's Most Extraordinary Homes" on Netflix...
So yeah, I obviously really have an itching for more content along the lines of buildings and especially homes. So, does anyone have suggestion on what to watch next?
6 votes -
Ise Jingu and the Pyramid of Enabling Technologies
2 votes -
The Scandinavian way to zero-carbon construction – cities like Oslo, Helsinki and Copenhagen are working to clean up one of the world's most high-emission industries
4 votes -
You can help rebuild Notre Dame by sponsoring a statue
5 votes -
Plans for an artificial island to house 35,000 people and protect the port of Copenhagen from rising sea levels have been approved by Danish MPs
8 votes -
Exorcising Aunt Jemima - Among calls for racial justice, several brands finally dropped racist imagery from their logos and designs. But is a real paradigm shift underway?
5 votes -
Discord celebrates six years, changes logo and font
25 votes -
Recommended training courses for graphic arts?
My fiance is an artist who was laid off because he worked for a major employer in the entertainment industry that required him to be in contact with people. So he's been unemployed for a long time...
My fiance is an artist who was laid off because he worked for a major employer in the entertainment industry that required him to be in contact with people.
So he's been unemployed for a long time now, but he has been trying to find work, but there isn't really anything available that uses his particular skills. So we invested in a digital art workstation (basically just bought a monitor with a digitizer built in to use a pen with) so that he could work on becoming an independant artist. But he's so bad at marketing and he spends so much time worrying about fine details that it takes him over a week to finish a single piece, so he hasn't had any success.
So if you combine this with a broken tooth that he hasn't been able to get taken care of because of a lapse in his dental insurance, he's not been in a good place.
I just bought a Mac and was looking for mac-native graphics programs (I sometimes work on marketing, so I need to do photo editing from time to time. Also I used to do photography as a hobby and want to get back into it), when I came across Serif's Affinity Designer Workbook. And I thought to myself that getting my fiance a training course in graphic design would allow him to shift gears into a segment where there is more work. It'll also give him a bit of a kick in the pants to get him moving and feeling better about himself.
I'm sure everyone knows there are millions of online training courses available right now, so I'm hoping someone might have any recommendations. I have some money saved up, so I don't mind paying a little bit extra if it'll result in better results. I'd prefer if it were a class that didn't rely on Adobe Illustrator if possible, but I know that it's the 'standard' and he'll probably have better luck if he has experience in it.
9 votes -
Gothenburg's bold plan to be world's best rainy city – it rains nearly 40% of the time in the Swedish city, so why not try to make the most of it?
17 votes -
Beyond Calibri: Finding Microsoft’s next default font
17 votes -
The ugly, dangerous, and inefficient stroads found all over the US and Canada
17 votes -
The art of slogans: MATH, Google Andrew Yang, Humanity First, and A New Way Forward
11 votes -
Usonia - A look at Frank Lloyd Wright's model for the middle class
5 votes -
Facing a housing crunch almost a century ago, Stockholm built 'barnrikehus' for low-income families – today they are some of the city's more sought-after properties
9 votes -
Brutalist buildings aren’t unlovable. You’re looking at them wrong.
13 votes -
Architects unveil a massive plan for Chinese city that’s dedicated to science and tech
10 votes -
Snøhetta, the world's first tunnel for large ships, has been approved and will soon begin looking for contractors in Norway – expected to begin construction in 2022
6 votes -
The incredible video game packaging designs of Hock Wah Yeo
13 votes -
9FRONT: Propaganda for a Unix-like OS
9 votes -
Cycling through the streets of Amsterdam
7 votes -
Swedish officials have joined Danish critics in registering concerns that an island-building plan, a signature test of Copenhagen's development model, could have risks
6 votes -
What I rent: £700 a month for a one bed flat in Kings Heath, Birmingham
11 votes