What My Parsons Peers Are Bang’n Out

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Filed under Showcase

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

Google Friend Connect: Just Add People… And Features

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Filed under Review

As Google Friend Connect goes out of private beta, I thought I would provide some comments on Google’s new attempt to change how people interact on the web. I had a chance to integrate Goggle Friend Connect into my latest project, Billboard For The People, and gain some insight into where this service holds value, and how I think it should evolve in the future.

For those who don’t know already, Google Friend Connect (GFC, for brevity’s sake) is a plug-n-play social networking utility that can easily be integrated into websites, and allow visitors to sign in, “join” your site, spread it amongst friends, provide comments, etc. More can be read about GFC on their website.

Let me start with what is great about GFC. This service could not be more simple to integrate into an existing website, which can be a crucial feature in many contexts. In the case of Billboard For The People, which is a grassroots effort I developed with Hyperakt Design Group to raise money for a congratulatory billboard for president elect Barack Obama, two main constraints for the project were, of course, time and budget.  We were able to get GFC fully integrated into our site (and assume the sites aesthetic, more or less) within a few hours, and you can’t beat the price of ‘free.’

In the case of Billboard for the People, we instantly had a space where like-minded users could sign-in, provide comments, and potentially invite their Google contacts to join the site as well, and spread the site across various other social networks, such as Myspace, Facebook and Twitter. While we already had similar ‘spread’ features built into the site more prominently, an influx of over 3,000 visitors joining the site via GFC within two weeks is definitely significant, regardless of some percent of users just joining to check out Google’s new tool.

The difficulty with GFC is that it seems to be living in an odd state between common use cases… Full on designers and developers will most likely be frustrated by the limited ability for customization, or fully and seamlessly integrating the social features that GFC provides into an existing infrastructure. Hopefully we can look forward to some sort of full API that would allow GFC’s robust social networking framework to be exploited to it’s full potential in new and creative ways beyond just message boards.

This leaves GFC as an ideal tool for the amateur web developer/administrator/content manager. Unfortunately, this is where we encounter GFC’s second limitation, which is a disappointing lack of features. As of GFC’s launch into public beta, the only tools available are a message board and a review/rating system. So this is where the question of ‘who is this for?’ comes back up. Any amateur developer who might want to integrate GFC into their existing site potentially already has access to these types of features (comments/reviews) with platforms such as Wordpress, or any other free blogging, forum, or content management system. Until a range of features are available that would allow site visitors to really interact with each other, and promote increased visit durations and visitor loyalty, I can see a lot of room for development in GFC’s value potential.

Regardless, GFC was unquestionably an asset to the Billboard for the People project, so there are definitely situations where the lack of a full API and more features is out-shined by how easy GFC is to implement, and quickly add some basic social features to smaller scale websites.

Billboard for the People

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Filed under Projects

It is with great pleasure that I announce the launch of my latest project, Billboard for the People: A Public Celebration of Progress. Deroy Peraza, over at Hyperakt Design Group had the brilliant idea of channeling all of this positive energy surrounding the election of Barack Obama into a grassroots effort to congratulate our president elect with a massive billboard in New York City.

The idea is pretty simple…

Step 1: We all donate some money over at BillboardForThePeople.com. If you are feeling inspired and generous, and can toss in some serious coin, fantastic! However, even if it’s just a few dollars, every little bit counts.

Step 2: We tell all of our friends about this initiative, and hopefully raise $25,000 by December 15th… Be sure to Digg it, join on FriendConnect and Facebook, etc, to help spread the word.

Step 3: We install a beautiful congratulatory billboard in Manhattan designed by Deroy Peraza, and the good folks over at Hyperakt, just in time for Obama’s inauguration, and welcome him into the White House with style.

After spending election night cavorting through Harlem with thousands of elated voters all smiling and hugging each other, and for once, all feeling like we are on the same page, I was instantly on board for developing the Billboard for the People website when Hyperakt came to me with the project idea.

Obama ran a campaign completely funded by the people, showing us that we do have the power to act collectively and inspire change in American politics. Let’s continue the tradition with this grassroots effort to congratulate Obama for his historic victory. If we all pitch in, we can totally make this happen, and continue to spread Obama’s message of hope and change.

Visit BillboardForThePeople.com, donate whatever you can, and be sure to tell of your friends about this. If we raise more than enough money to put a billboard up in Manhattan, then we can put more billboards up in other cities as well.

Life 2.0 - Welcome To The Future

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Filed under Projects, Videos

After doing so much design work for Web 2.0 start ups, I made this satirical start up investment pitch video about a year ago, but never really pushed it out. Now with the market in the hole, it seemed appropriate that I offer the tech industry a few ideas… Venture Capitalists, feel free to get in touch.

The New Hope Exhibit - Geneva

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Filed under Projects

Saturday was the opening of The New Hope exhibit in Geneva, Switzerland, which I had the honor of doing a piece for with Hyperakt Design Group. After gaining international attention for an Obama poster designed by Deroy Peraza at Hyperakt, the studio was asked to do a full series inspired by Obama’s message of hope, to be exhibited at the Flux Laboratory in Geneva. I contributed a Flash-based interactive piece called Kids Vote 2008 which explores kids’ perspectives on the election through an interactive cloud of comments on the two presidential candidates. While the piece is currently being projected at the Flux Laboratory, it can also be experience online at:

http://www.kidsvote2008.us/

I was responsible for the interaction design and front end development of this piece, and with a two week deadline, was left with little time for sleep over the past two weeks. However, with the site live now, and on display in Geneva, all the hard work feels pretty good.

While it is a little too early to hear any direct feedback from the show in Geneva, Kids Vote 2008 has already started to get some attention around the web, with a “Fresh Picks” feature on the website Moluv, a mention on the Communication Arts website, and a blurb on E-Creative.net.

Check out the project, and let me know what you think.

UPDATE
Kids Vote 2008 was featured (briefly) on Swiss television last week

Also, Hyperakt has put up a flickr set of photos from the show in Geneva. Seems like people at the show responded well.

Welcome to Zeke Shore / Blog

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Filed under Miscellaneous

Well it finally came to pass… I re-designed my portfolio and found it necessary to start my own design blog. The formalities really quick: my name is Zeke Shore, I am from Boston MA, I have been an interactive, graphic and motion designer and developer since 2002, and I am currently living in NYC finishing up my studies at Parsons The New School for Design and working as a freelance designer. That was a mouthful. As anyone reading this surly knows, the design blog market is not at all saturated…. so my presence is clearly needed.

This was a multi-fold decision… the first being a pressing need for a vamped up portfolio site that better reflects where I am as a designer (it’s been about five years since the last design went live). While researching other portfolio sites, it became clear that every designer and their intern has a design blog these days. While I am not just ‘jumping on the bandwagon,’ I will concede to being tempted by the shameless self promotion that accompanies the consistent publishing of *hopefully* interesting and useful content. On a more honorable note, I relay on other design blogs every day for everything from news to inspiration to development tutorials, and I am well over due in returning the favor to the design community. Cheers.