Spring is here.
January 18th, 2007 by bodonationI have moved.
k.figtreedesign.com
Wishful thinking.
November 4th, 2006 by bodonationHibernate, I shall.
October 14th, 2006 by bodonationSongbird.
October 6th, 2006 by bodonation
Trust me. If you are a music lover, you have to download this.
Exit plan.
October 5th, 2006 by bodonationBlog entry number 65.
(I am searching for reasons why not to end this blog.)
Do I blog because I want to write or I want people to read?
What are your reasons?
Draw draw.
October 3rd, 2006 by bodonationRats.
October 2nd, 2006 by bodonationStarting October 6 in US. The highly anticipated remake of The Infernal Affairs by Martin Scorsese. Critics are raving.
(I loved the original and I like Martin Scorsese.)

(Updated Oct 6, 2006) From New York Times: What helps make "The Departed" at once a success and a relief isn’t that Mr. Scorsese is back on the mean streets where he belongs; what’s at stake here is the film and the filmmaking, not the director’s epic importance.
Dogs can fly.
September 28th, 2006 by bodonationMourning for Fletcher.
September 26th, 2006 by bodonationI’ve just learned that my design hero, the living legend, Alan Fletcher has passed away on Sep 21 in in East Sussex, England. He was 74. Few days ago, I was still talking about inviting him as a speaker in one of my future conferences, if I ever get the chance.
But now he is gone.
Sad.
Born 1931 in Nairobi, Kenya to a British family, Alan went on to form Fletcher/Forbes/Gill in the 1960s, which eventually morphed in 1970s into what is Pentagram today. He was also one of the founders of D&AD, which became an important organisation for advancing and promoting British design. His works left an indellible mark on modern graphic design, not just on complex corporate identity programmes, but also on posters and book covers, where his spontaneous graphic wits and humor often shine through.
Steven Heller wrote in New York Times:
He died wearing a T-shirt with handwritten words taken from one of his
posters: “I don’t know where I’m going, but I’m on my way."
Quoting Times UK:
Fletcher once said that he hoped “to get younger as I get older”, and
succeeded. Intellectually open and insatiably curious, he was the
antithesis of a grumpy old man, and befriended many younger designers.
As for me, I wish I had the honour to know him in person, not just owning a copy of The Art of Looking Sideways.
But it is too late.

* Reports at Pentagram, Design Museum, Guardian, Times, and The Independent.
Read the online tribute to Alan Fletcher hosted by Creative Review, includes postings by Brett Wickens, Erik Spiekermann, Michael C Place, Michael Johnson and Vince Frost. Read Michael Johnson’s memoir here.
* Update - Sep 28, 2006 - Design Observer - Michael Bierut.








