With the start of the new year, I thought I might showcase some of the more brilliant work my peers have been doing in the Communication Design and Technology department at Parsons School of Design over the past few months. These guys never stop inspiring me, and it’s an honor to be working with them.
Andrew Mahon
Interaction designer Andrew Mahon recently did an algorithmic music visualization for a song by the Apex Twins. He built this with the C++ library Open Frameworks and Open GL, mostly as an exploration in algorithmic animation, but the results are very engaging. This piece is the culmination of a whole series of algorithmic animations that he has been experimenting with, which can all be seen on his Vimeo page. You can also follow Andrew on his Tumblr blog for a constant stream of musings, ideas, and inspiring imagery and videos.
Lucas Sharp
The multi-disciplined Lucas Sharp has been working up a storm with a couple of new Typefaces designs over the past few months. His first official typeface debut is the jaw-droppingly intricate blackletter display set titled Black Slash. Throwing many blackletter conventions out the window, Black Slash feels fresh and unique, elegant yet brutal… finally a new blackletter that actually feels new. Body text set with some high leading is easily legible, while the lavishly serifed caps let titles jump off the page and punch the viewer in the throat in display situations.


Sharp is still refining all of the ligatures and numbers, so we can expect a limited sample release in a few months, and then a full OpenType release available for licensing sometime after that. Something to nibble on in the meantime is an alternate caps set that he has already started working on to even further spread the possibilities for this already diverse typeface.

Sharp also recently pumped out another display face aptly titled “Your Designer Handbag Sucks.” YDHS was inspired by cookies taking (or loosing?) form as they bake, and works fantastically in knocked out situations, where lighter colors can add to it’s billowy feel. YDHS is fun, friendly and unique. We can hopefully expect a sample set out soon, and a full OpenType version available some time after that.
More of Lucas Sharp’s graphic design, textile design, typface design and animation work can be seen on his website
Keep checking back for periodic updates on some of the cool stuff happening in the Communication Design and Technology department at Parsons School of Design







