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Wednesday, October 05, 2011

collage prints by tiny fawn

Collage strikes me as one of the most difficult art forms. I think about how challenging it is to convey form with the stroke of a paintbrush or pen, and then I consider trying to do it with a ripped piece of paper . . . yikes. When these fauna collage prints by Darrah Gooden of Tiny Fawn landed in my inbox, I had to stop and stare in admiration for a bit. They feel so effortlessly composed, and I love how Darrah manages to convey movement and personality in each animal so economically — just a few artful slivers of colored tissue. You can see the full collection of Darrah's collage works by clicking here. Thanks for sharing, Darrah! — Kate

diy project: autumn leaf bouquet

I don't know what it's like in your neighborhood, but when I step outside here in Oakland, I sense it right away: Fall is in the air! I'm lucky enough to have a few turning trees on my street, so I don't miss out entirely on the brilliant autumn colors I remember from growing up in NH. Speaking of brilliant autumn colors, I'm thrilled to share this stunning maple leaf rose bouquet DIY from a fellow Kate — clay, fiber and paper artist Kate Hust.

Kate first learned how to make these a few years ago from a retired art teacher in her community, and now they've become an annual tradition when fall rolls around. Her instructor taught her to wrap the leaves really tight, so they looked like rose buds,  but Kate has modified the technique a bit to suit her own tastes: She likes to find the really big leaves and make them with large open "petals." She's clearly perfected the craft, and I'm so happy that she's decided to pass the tradition on to us. Thanks for sharing, Kate! — Kate

diy_leaf_rose_introdiy_leaf_rose_materialsdiy_leaf_rose_3diy_leaf_rose_5diy_leaf_rose_6diy_leaf_rose_7diy_leaf_rose_8diy_leaf_rose_9diy_leaf_rose_10diy_leaf_rose_2diy_leaf_rose_1

Kill Math makes math more meaningful

Kill Math

After a certain point in math education, like some time during high school, the relevance of the concepts to the everyday and the real world seem to fade. However, in many ways, math lets you describe real life better than you can with just words. Designer Bret Victor hopes to make the abstract and conceptual to real and concrete with Kill Math.

Kill Math is my umbrella project for techniques that enable people to model and solve meaningful problems of quantity using concrete representations and intuition-guided exploration. In the long term, I hope to develop a widely-usable, insight-generating alternative to symbolic math.

As part of the early project, Victor developed a prototype interface on the iPad to help you understand dynamical systems. It probably sounds boring to you, but the video and explanation will change your mind:

Statistics has the same problem with concepts, and is one of the main reasons why people hate it so much. They learn about curves, hypothesis tests, and distribution tables, and the takeaway is that there are some equations that you plug numbers into. Sad. Of course there are plenty of people working on that, but there's still a ways to go.

Social Media Brandsphere

The Social Media Brandsphere is a new collaboration between Brian Solis andJESS3.  The Brandsphere explores how brand storytelling can cross different communication mediums. 

Over on the JESS3 blog, they've posted 10 of the different early versions and concepts of the Brandsphere so you can see some of the behind-the-scenes design process at work. 

Social networks and channels present brands with a broad array of media opportunities to engage customers and those who influence them. Each channel offers a unique formula for engagement where brands become stories and people become storytellers. Using a transmedia approach, the brand story can connect with customers differently across each medium, creating a deeper, more enriching experience. Transmedia storytelling doesn't follow the traditional rules of publishing; it caters to customers where they connect and folds them into the narrative. In any given network, brands can invest in digital assets that span five media landscapes:

1. Paid: Digital advertising, banners, adwords, overlays

2. Owned: Created assets, custom content

3. Earned: Brand-related conversations and user-generated content

4: Promoted: in-stream or social paid promotions vehicles (e.g. Twitter's Promoted products and Facebook's Sponsored Stories)

5. Shared: Open platforms or communities where customers co-create and collaborate with brands. (e.g. Dell's IdeaStorm and Starbuck'sMyStarbucksIdea.)

Any combination of the five media strategies defines a new Brandsphere where or

ganizations can capture attention, steer online experiences, spark conversations and word of mouth can help customers address challenges or create new opportunities. Each media channel connects differently with people and thus requires a dedicated approach integrating tangible and intangible value. Doing so ensures a critical path for social media content: relevance, reach and resonance.

 

Available as a poster on the Conversation Prism site