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ALTER IS COOL
Source: Alter
The Making of a Coca Cola Sign
(1945)
In the new issue of CR, I talk to Coca-Cola archivist, Ted Ryan, about the history of the brand's 125 year-old identity, explored in a new show at the Design Museum. One of the highlights of the display is a book documenting the design and build of their first neon sign for Piccadilly Circus, in 1954...
When he returned to Atlanta, Ryan kindly sourced some scans of some of the pages from this rare publication, a few of which we used in the print piece in the July issue. The rest we present here as a series, alongside two Technical Data pages, should anyone be interested in how the sign was actually constructed.
The manufacture of the sign is also recorded – here, spray-painting the letters:
The sign begins to take shape on Piccadilly Circus:
The final image in the book, the only one in colour, shows the sign lit-up:
Via: Creative Review
Mmm...Lego Cake.
Now that's what you call some explosive head.
"I've never had a problem with drugs. I've had problems with the police."
- Keith Richards
Monica introduced him to the sounds of Joan Jett. He never stopped listening.
During WWII, Polish-Jewish artist Arthur Szyk’s highly-charged, acidic caricatures of Axis-power leaders in his trademark illuminated manuscript style, reportedly enjoyed more popularity than pin-up girls on the walls of American military bases. With an alleged bounty issued by Hitler on his head, Szyk emigrated to the U.S. in 1940 with the sole assignment of “popularizing the struggle of the British and Polish nations with Nazism in the New World.”
Via: All Day
Gay Pride Parade in New York City, 1972.
Bardot
Booty
Behind Bardot…
Sometimes, I wish I had a rocket pack and blast away...other times I want to explore in the ocean deep inside.
There's no denying the cultural impact of Facebook. It has united almost 700 million people, including most of you reading this, becoming the greatest social introduction platform the world has ever seen.
But there are also some recent signs of "Facebook fatigue." There is only so much you can do to socialize online, especially after you've exhausted your friend list. Some people also complain they're spending so much time on Facebook that they're short-changing the rest of their lives.
Evidence suggests a small but increasing number of users -- at least in North America, where Facebook use is especially saturated -- may be shunning the site. The site lost more than 7 million active users in the United States and Canada last month, according to data from the blog Inside Facebook, although Facebook disputes those figures.
Others are consciously reducing the time they spend on the site.
"I figured out that I wouldn't look back as an old man and wish I had spent more time on Facebook," says David Cole, an IT manager from Boston. Cole said he believes the popular social-networking site is a useful tool, but not a replacement for what he calls "realbook" experiences.
"Instead of working on an essay, I would waste time browsing people's walls," says Kip Krieger, a college student from Virginia, who like Cole has consciously reduced how much time he spends on Facebook.
On top of that, Facebook has become predictable, Krieger says.
"It's really gotten to a point where I know pretty much what my friends are going to post. They usually just write the same thing over and over again, and I am getting sick of that."
Joshua DeRosa, a Salt Lake City graphic artist and former Facebook user, agrees.
"I don't need to see pics or hear updates about people's babies," he says. "I know what babies look like, and while you might think what Junior did was the cutest thing ever, I couldn't care less."
Is Facebook Losing Users?
"Go ahead, leave. I still own your soul!"
Via: CNN