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15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Written by: Stanley Poh

Before the early nineteenth century, books were hand-bound using heavy materials such as wood, leather, gold, silver and jewels. Over the centuries, book binding had always serve as a protection to expensively printed or hand-made pages, and as embellishments tribute to the cultural authorities.

Other than the two most common covers; hardcovers and paperbacks, there are many other alternatives and additions, such as dust jackets, ring-binding and out-dated forms such as the nineteenth-century "paper-boards" and the even more antiquated hand-binding.

book covers

It is often said; don’t judge a book by its cover, but in this case, the opposite appears to be more true. It is not often that we would see book covers made of wood or imprinted with real life objects appearing to be part of the book itself, but many have decided to showcase their talent through these beautiful artworks we have below today.

Clarendon Books 2. Two Clarendon type specimen books; one with cocobolo cover & the other with bloodwood covers. (by andymangold)

3117777140 667206fa1b 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Adidas Def Jam Collaboration Book. A prelook book done in collaboration with adidas and Roundhouse Media. (by Dan Kinto)

925291239666290 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Rodrigo Munoz Avia. A book cover design of a newly bought button-up shirt printed as its cover. (by Tomato Kosir)

777811230049776 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Capas Prateadas. A simple envelope-like design. (by Zoopress studio)

Capas prateadas 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

What To Read Now, July 13, 2009. The first image is subscribers’ edition cover. The second is the original composition. The third is the newsstand edition. (by Newsweek)

newsweek bookstoreadnow3 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Magic 105.4. The packaging and book design combined Magic FM branding with the look and feel of a luxury travel guide. (by Jason McReynolds)

with love from magic medium 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

i am. I am is an image and text combination and compilation of self-descriptions from the profile pages of people online. (by palindromenoise)

i am by palindromenoise 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

MDF. A 25 cm x 17.5 cm cardboard cover design. (by Zoopress studio)

Capture 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Mini album. (by Zoopress studio)

minialbum 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Model Book. A book on the photography of the fashion french photographer, Gerard Uferas. (by artdude85)

9392503c3ef7eadc48bc2f849ab49b39 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Quantum of Solace. An enveloped style design against a grey background – evoking a top secret feel to it. (by Jason Kottke)

quantum of solace 20081117 144042 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Solex Typeface Specimen Book. A type specimen book on Emigre Foundry’s "Solex" typeface family designed with the professional looking concept of espionage. (by aphoticdesigner)

Solex Typeface Specimen Book by aphoticdesigner 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

The Oil. An interesting yet simple design. (by Alexey Maslov)

532131195612416 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Últimas encomendas antes da licença maternidade. (by Zoopress Studio)

ultimas 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

Wooden Celtic Book. A hard cover 1/8 letter size book, wood-burned with celtic designs. (by yagarasu)

Wooden Celtic Book by yagarasu 15 (Really) Beautiful & Creative Book Covers

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The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

Smashing-magazine-advertisement in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And WaterSpacer in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water
 in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water  in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water  in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

Smashing Editorial: Please notice that the language in some parts of this article may be very informal. If you think you might be offended, please stop reading this article now.

I hate the division represented in this title. It’s the major stumbling block in modern business. Power struggle is never constructive, and it at least doubles workforce effort at a time when streamlined is crucial for a positive ROI. You can spell “team” from the word “marketing,” but I’ve yet to see a sense of it in marketing. What can one spell from “creative”? “Reactive”? I’ve seen plenty of that, and for good reason.

Don’t get me wrong: I love marketing as a practice! Relatively speaking, marketing is a fairly new practice (marketing in the sense of “public”, broad mass marketing, applied to products in the modern age — ed.), and one that has to evolve each day to keep up with consumerism and technology. As a designer, coming up with marketing ideas is orgasmic. Guerilla, sabotage and viral marketing are the work of genius, which is why we don’t see them very often. But you are probably thinking horrid thoughts about marketing practitioners right now, so let’s rethink for a second.

I have known a handful of great marketing people in my career, and they were smart enough to form their own companies. They always managed to do the delicate dance to create something that was effective and not just popular with anyone who might, oddly enough, have an opinion. And then there are the people you see every dreadful day.

Stampout in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

[Offtopic: by the way, did you know that Smashing Magazine has one of the most influential and popular Twitter accounts? Join our discussions and get updates about useful tools and resources — follow us on Twitter!]

It’s A Diverse Crowd Out There

I have a ton of marketing stories, but my favorite one comes from when I was art directing and designing a major push for a new licensed character across all marketing channels. The staff and I worked like crazy to get the lines done in time for approval. It took months — that’s how many lines there were.

After our submission for approval from the licensor, a member of the marketing staff, lower level, came to me, telling me the changes that were needed. First off, don’t tell someone the changes: write them down so that there’s no misunderstanding. Luckily, I was taking notes. One of the changes called for major surgery on the main character to remove markings on their face. It made no sense to me, and I questioned it, but he stood fast and insisted that that’s what the licensor wanted. I asked to see the email from the licensor.

“No.”

I asked that he email the licensor to ask for clarification.

“No.”

The most infuriating thing was that this over-sized man with a cherubic face, looked like Baby Huey from the old Harvey Comics. Sounded a bit like him, too. It was hard to speak with him without laughing. As his new nickname circulated through several departments, a contest started among the staff to try to deal with Baby Huey without laughing.

I knew trouble was brewing, and so, like any smart person who would make file copies or turn off layers, the art staff and I stated cutting the image and placing everything the licensor wanted removed on a hidden layer. We did this to hundreds of pieces. A month later, we submitted the changes, and then (surprise, surprise) the licensor ripped marketing a new one for removing the marking, so essential to the character. An impromptu witch-hunt was held right outside the art department, next to the marketing offices. The president personally led it.

Without wasting any more column space than is needed to state the obvious, Baby Huey was spanked… and I believe the president actually asked him, “What is your major malfunction, Baby Huey!?”

The best part was when I was asked how long it would take to fix it. Explaining to the lay person that I would simply turn on some layers in Photoshop took longer than actually turning them on, but I scored big points with the president, while my “marketing step-brother” was sent to military school.

This doesn’t happen enough. But it does and can happen! At another corporation, marketing was publicly spanked for taking eleven-and-a-half weeks to work on an initiative that had only twelve weeks in total — giving creative, copy and design three or four days to execute lines for hundreds of products. Creative would always get it done, so action to stop it took a while, but the grumbling and angry staff meetings got some relief in the form of at least six weeks.

Are We Or They The Strange Ones?

What do creatives look like to non-creatives? Obviously, everyone thinks they can design an ad or logo in Microsoft Word, so immediately we become snooty, whining snobs. A great marketing person I worked with wrote a recommendation for me and said, “…great designs without a lot of creative baggage!”

“Creative baggage.” What could that mean? For anyone who has wrangled creatives, whether staff or freelance, we can be intolerable freaks. It’s hard to remember the last creative who actually followed my art direction without an argument or apology. We are also weak and lack the social skills to deal with corporate power. We often give up our power in an effort to be seen as “flexible” or “a team player.”

An art director who was firmly a puppet on the hand of the company she worked for gave me this recommendation: “He usually hits strategy, but if some adjustments need to be made, he is very open to suggestion and direction. [Speider] has worked with our team for a long time and understands our process.”

The process was that I went into meeting all smiles, told a few jokes and did exactly what I was told to do. The pay check helped me live with myself.

Drinkblood in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

In most cases, that means doing what you’re told by anyone bold enough to speak their opinion about the creative process and not be questioned. I have had to pull marketing co-workers aside and remind them that we were both reporting to the same person and that no one ever told me anything about reporting to them. I’m not “being difficult”: I’m taking control of my work for my department so that I don’t have to take the fall for failed initiatives and low sales down the road that result from someone else’s design decisions. I never get angry or aggressive, although people who have worked with me say that my sarcasm could be deadly at times. Baby Huey’s ghost haunts me.

Be Different, But Expect The Same

Just the other day, a client showed me a product catalog that I thought was from 1972. It was their 2010 catalog, and the creative department’s directors asked me to bring one of their paper products into the present (or future) and do “something different.” I love when they say that.

I did some of the finest work of my career… some good work. The creatives were really on board, and revisions were almost non-existent. Imagine basically having free reign to design some fun and impressive paper products and having the full support of your clients? Well, no good effort goes unpunished, and I was informed that the marketing department rejected the work in favor of a catalog that looked like a sequel to the one from 1972.

Incharge in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

What has the fear in business done to our ability to make fast, hard decisions in the marketplace? Safe and take-a-step-back has gotten us into the mess we’re in right now. How do we get out of it? I include this passage from someone who would refer to himself only as a “suit.”

I have to have the confidence that the design solution is meeting the needs of the client and is achieving strategic/tactical goals. Because of that, if there are elements of your design that I’m uncomfortable with, I will call them out and, in some cases, will nix them. Similarly for the client, they have to be comfortable about how their own brand is being presented, how their market will react, even how their own staff will react.

“How their market will react.” That should be the only concern. And how did this “suit” become the tip of the approval funnel? The truth is that people can’t let go without second- and third-guessing what will be successful. It’s not a question of whether, say, a good marketing plan based on researched demographics would improve a creative brief that professional designers and writers could use to create a cohesive package. The reality is more like, “Just design, and I’ll make changes until I see what I like.” That always makes for a great waste of time and resources.

Business is tight for many reasons, but just one wrong move could cost you big time. My question is, if the marketing plan is sound and the sales staff is competent, then why would those simple little changes that are requested to please people truly affect the product?

”You know, Bob, I was about to buy that package of Fluggelbinders that I wanted, but I couldn’t bring myself to do it.”

“Too expensive?”

“No. The color of the package turned me off.”

Happens like that every day, doesn’t it?! I used that exchange in a committee meeting in which the background color of an exclusive product was discussed and sampled for a week. The marketing manager turned to me and said that I had negated marketing’s input. I thought marketing’s responsibility was to figure out the target audience, their habits, income and so on and how to best reach them through media and other advertising venues — not how blue or green the product should be? Silly me! Maybe it’s a marketing secret that can’t be shared with creative. They’re spies for… something.

Do You Want To Get Involved In Office Politics?

What can one say when sitting in a committee meeting and subjective suggestions are flying around, usually contradicting each other, and people are echoing previous requests but adding “More red” or “Bigger logo” or “I’ll know when I see it”? I sit and listen, take notes and then turn to my contact (if it’s a freelance job) and ask what he or she would like me to implement. To be sickeningly submissive, I say, “Some great insights here, but some are counter to the creative brief and some other directions suggested here.”

I turn to the art director, boss, marketing person or whoever hired me and ask them to go over what they think will be needed. Usually, they tell me just to follow what I was told in the committee meeting. This is when I’m thankful for hourly rates, because the Frankenstein created by the committee is usually too monstrous to please anyone. It goes around and around as long as more than one person has a final say on the project. Imagine what would happen if too many cooks worked on a dish. The chefs I know are insane and would stab and de-bone each other.

When freelancing, you are removed from the eternal struggle between creative and marketing. You are only a tool used by creative and a bludgeon used by marketing to wield its power over creative. Just ignore it and let the creative department deal with it.

But what happens when you are the art director or designer on staff? If you are, then prepare for office politics. The struggle between creative and marketing has nothing to do with design or marketing: it is the good old human impulse to assert one’s power over others, to be the alpha dog.

Whatever your position or department, everyone in it is jockeying for some measure of power over others, from the frowning minimum-wage guard at the front desk who tells you to sign in (as you’re doing it) to the mail deliverer who won’t give you your mail away from your desk to the co-worker who tries to convince you that part of their job is now your job or that part of your authority is now theirs.

Humans usually spend a lot of effort blending in with the herd and shying away from confrontation. Confrontational people know this and use it. When the person taking your order asks if you want to super-size it, do you say “Sure” or “No”? You say yes because your brain and protective nature tell you to go the easy route and say yes. Less aggravation. Why do good girls like bad boys? Because we… I mean they go against the herd, they break with convention, and they’re confrontational.

Pi Cramit in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

So, it stands to reason, while you’re in the workplace — where you face the pressure of HR rules, progress reports and the ever-present cliques of workers and executives — that you would feel alone and stay away from confrontational co-workers. But you can bet that they will at least size you up from day one, if not start stealing your authority and setting a standard that will follow you throughout your career at that firm.

You must start a new job with basic knowledge of your rights as an employee. Listen, and be bold, compassionate and assured. Show no fear, and show that being flexible is not the same as being a wimp. Any business book will tell you that the weak die. You have to set your own boundaries when starting a job. If you “wait and see,” then standards will be set for you as you adjust to the learning curve. If you relinquish any territory, you will not be able to get it back. You will open yourself to charges like, “That’s the way it’s always been done, and you said nothing last time.”

(By the way, a comeback to that last line is, “It may have been done that way in the past, but part of my job is to streamline the process to get the best results, faster and more efficiently. I’m sure you’ll love what my system will do for the workflow and product.”)

As with any situation, your gut will tell you what’s right and wrong, as will your job description. To whom do you report? To whom do others report? If a marketing person reports to the same person as you or is lower on the corporate ladder, why would you let them dictate anything if you were not told to follow their lead? Sometimes, someone may be assigned to oversee all aspects of a project. In that case, they are the boss, and that’s that… but that role ends when the project ends.

If a colleague of yours on the same rung of the corporate ladder makes a poor suggestion in a committee meeting, it’s best to nod and just not execute it. Either you’ll never hear a word about it or the colleague will approach you about it — in which case you shouldn’t respond that you don’t have to take their suggestion, which could be labeled as “confrontational” (it’s always the people who defend themselves who are “confrontational”), but rather that their idea, after much consideration, was found to have no merit. Simple and easy. It deflates their ego and could lead to sexual performance problems down the line. How can you argue with that?

“I thought my suggestions were good!”

“Sorry, but I didn’t think so, and no one else echoed your concerns.”

(This cuts the person off from others by setting a line that people would rather not cross. You are showing strength as the alpha dog. The pack will fall on your side.)

A more direct and devastating attack would be to ask, “Why do you think I’m incapable of doing my job?” This is a heart-stopper because it cannot be answered. They may argue that you lack team vision or that they’re protecting the client’s interests. Again, ask why they think you haven’t fulfilled the team’s vision, drawn from the creative briefs, and why they see you as acting against the client’s interests.

It’s like a fistfight. It lasts only a few seconds before the herd breaks it up… Yes, this is confrontation. Even confrontational people are taken aback when confronted, unless they are psychotic — in which case, pray that HR rules keep them from turning violent. And if they do become violent, taking a knuckle sandwich from your lunchbox is a small price to pay to see the aggressor fired and spend a night or two in county jail awaiting a bail hearing, opening the way for you for a civil lawsuit. A win-win situation!

On the other hand, you might encounter a “squeaky wheel,” who runs to the boss demanding “respect” and a title over you. Often, in the interest of a quick resolution, the boss lets the squealer have their way. You’re only hope is to calmly state your case, note your accomplishments without the squealer’s input, and add that it’s a business office and not a therapist’s office for people to work out their personal problems by laying them on others. Firm, direct and sound.

If Squeaky gets their way, then you’re doomed. But then, you don’t really want to work in a place like that anyway. If the boss would so easily knock you down the ladder, then you need a new boss. If you get your way, others will fear confronting you. I think coining the name for Baby Huey may have frightened my colleagues into avoiding my displeasure and gaining a nickname of their own.

The Enemy Within?

Once you establish that you are not a push-over, most people will respect your boundaries, and the natural order will be restored… with an occasional bump as a stray member of the herd probes your weak spots. Those weak spots, as some will discover, are your department colleagues: lowly designers and writers who will surely tremor when someone storms into the office and demands the changes that “I called for in the meeting.” Now you, as that lowly worker, have another problem. You have just given up your power to a stranger and put your creative director in a tough spot. Your actions affect how your supervisor controls the department and your job.

The proper thing to do is to tell the intruder that you are just a designer or writer and that they really need to speak to the creative director so that they can assign the proper revisions and work. Then smile and point to the creative director’s office. If your colleagues are on their toes, one of them will summon the creative director to come into the department and protect his or her minions from intruders. I’ve done it a gazillion times.

Summon your righteous indignation, flair your nostrils and imitate the tiger. When the interloper leaves, send an email gently reminding them that they must come to you for any requests, because only you know everyone’s schedule, and all changes must be signed off by you, as department head. Don’t assume that HR will intercede to stop this; they believe that the process should be flexible enough to keep work flowing. And as long as the bloody wound isn’t squirting arterial red like a fountain, HR likes as few problems as possible.

Points to Remember

  1. You were around. In fact, aside from occasional bathroom breaks and meetings, you’re around 12 hours a day on average.
  2. You are responsible for everything that comes out of your department and will be held accountable for it.
  3. People want their way and will try anything to get it.
  4. Don’t allow people under your authority to sabotage your power or security.
  5. Prepare a response to an objection or make a list of responses for when a ridiculous argument is used to attack you.
  6. HR wants the easiest path to peace and calm. Present all squealers as troublemakers and not team players. Use corporate-speak to your advantage.
  7. Sometimes you will lose the battle. Sometimes you will also lose the war. Form as many strong allies in the company as you can. The higher the executive level, the better!
  8. Does someone want to comment on a design in a conference meeting? Make some well-educated comments yourself. Perhaps you see a hole in the marketing plan, or the project doesn’t have enough creative time, or the sales material is a week past deadline. Bring it up gently and kindly. I believe that’s called passive-aggressive. Use it!
  9. Grab power, and don’t wait for it to be offered. Take on an extra project; start an initiative yourself; or earn a few million dollars for the company. They’ll sit up and take notice.

Power grabs are often made by people too incompetent to do their own work, and public displays of “directing” are thought to mask that incompetence. They often are. But handled correctly, they aren’t, because they won’t get the chance.

Every Relationship Has Good And Bad Times

When I worked at one large corporation, I was closing up my office and the art department at 7:00 pm on a Friday night when a young woman from the marketing department caught me in the hallway and asked to step into my now locked office. She immediately went into an act about how “her” project was so important and how I had to do it by Monday and email it to her because she would be away for the weekend.

I looked at her in silence. I asked who she reported to and learned it was one of my subordinates (if you went by the order on the corporate masthead). I told her I would talk to her boss on Monday to find out why she would have the utter nerve to hope that I would be in the office at 7:00 pm on a Friday night and then expect me to work all weekend on something that was not important enough for such a tight deadline. She stormed off.

Cantfly in The Creative vs. The Marketing Team: Yin And Yang, Oil And Water

I don’t remember why I was late on Monday, but as I walked down the hall, people were shouting for me to check my email. There was an email from the young lady I spoke with on Friday evening. She must have gone back to her office and written a very angry message, courtesy copying the entire corporate division, about how unwilling I was to work on her project, and how she was cancelling it, and how I was costing the company millions of dollars and immortal souls, and hail Satan, hail Satan, and so on.

In walks her boss, one of those fine marketing people who I mentioned do exist. The young lady had the project for three weeks (grabbing it as her first project and naturally wanting to make a big splash), and as I suspected, it wasn’t time sensitive… Mind you, she sat on it for the previous three weeks, and it did have to be at the printer the very next day. Being of sound minds, the head of marketing and I were able to come up with a solution, work hard together and make the deadline. Creative and marketing did it… together, with no arguments or stepping on each other’s toes or egos, and we both shared in the glow of accomplishment. It can happen. Maybe we just need guns to our heads at the time?

(al)


© Speider Schneider for Smashing Magazine, 2010. | Permalink | Post a comment | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine
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Logo Design Inspiration: 30 Creative Green Logos

The color green holds positive connotations for most people and green logos are super popular at the moment. Green is a symbol for environmentalism and our love affair with green stretches back to ancient Egypt where the color was symbolic of resurrection and immortality (the god Osiris was supposedly green skinned). Today, environmentally friendly companies, web 2.0 companies, organic food shops, juice bars, salad bars and fruit companies all love a good green logo. Green logos are in vogue and these companies are driving the trend.

green logos

Below are 30 examples of creative green logos. The examples include an organic coffee company logo, environmentally free LED lights and ‘clean integration’. The designers below have also successfully applied green to consulting, physiotherapy and even programming (see Code Fish and The Coding Frog below). These logos are fresh, upbeat and, hopefully, inspirational.

Suggest read: 18 Beautiful Web Designs That Emphasize Green.

30 Beautiful Green Logo Designs

Green Labs

Green Labs Logo

Code Fish

Code Fish Logo

Marshalls pet store

Logo design pet store

The Coding Frog

Logo design

Green Apple Transfers

Green Apple Transfers Logo

Living Heirloom

Logo design website

Arch Partners

Architecture logo design

Versus

Logo design bird

Sertifi

Sertifi Logo

RPJ Consulting

rpj consulting Logo

Chumu visual communication

Chumu Visual Communication Logo

BFM(Bibliotheque Forum Meyrin)

Bibliotheque Forum Meyrin Logo

Leetenda Urbana

Leeyenda Urbana Logo

Clean Integration

Clean Integration Logo

Evotweet

Evotweet

Eternaleds

Eternaleds Logo

Pure Oils

PureOils Logo

Eight

Eight Logo

See Creative

SEE Creative logo

Bio Cento

BioCento Logo

John Milander Architects

John Milander Architects Logo

Meadville Land Service

Environmental Logo Design

Helping Hands For Pets

Animal logo design

Hutan Consulting

Consulting Logo Design

Eco Bikes

Eco bikes logo design

Realty Connection Inc

Realty Connection Logo

Toronto Bodyworks

Toronto Bodyworks Logo

Thymes

Thymes Logo

Swing Studios

swing studios

Forma Humana

forma humana

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40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

Have you ever seen a word and read the same word upside down? This is one form of an ambigram. An ambigram (from Latin: ambi both + gram = letter) is a word or words that can be read in more than one direction, where the word reads the same when upside down or turn over to form an entirely new word. The term “ambigram” was first used to mean “ambiguous anagram” by Judith E. Bagai, a former editor of The Enigma, the official organ of The National Puzzlers’ League.

preview 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

There are many types of ambigrams such as rotational ambigrams, reflective types, 3-dimensional, etc. but the most basic and popular ones are the flipscript or rotational ambigram in which word or words when flipped both horizontal or vertical way, still spells the same word as before. Today, ambigrams are used in graphic design, commercial logos, book covers, tattoo artworks and music albums. These typographical artworks are used by graphic designers because of their symmetry and the optical illusions it present. Ambigrams became much more popular when it was prominently featured in Dan Brown’s bestselling novel, Angels & Demons. With patience and creativity, you can turn any word into an ambigram.

Below are my collection of 40 really cool and creatively designed ambigrams. Without further ado, let start twisting our neck and try to view them in upside down :)

“Illuminati” Edited from the original version by John Langdon.
Illuminati Ambigram WP by Illuminati92 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“The Stone Rose” via mirving123

The Stone Rose ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Steampunk” Rotational ambigram version 2 by NastyBasty
Steampunk ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Labyrinth” Created for the Nagfa Ambigams Challenge. By Krzychu
Labyrinth ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Marley” via mirving123

Marley ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“One Blood One Love” or "One Love One Blood" the other way. By revcruz
One Blood One Love ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Azathoth” By NastyBasty

Azathoth rotational ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Love/Hate” via nichck

Love Hate Ambigram Design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Shark Attack” By wowtattoos
Shark Attack ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Baltimore” Via mirving123
Baltimore ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Right/Wrong” Amibigram with some graffiti element. By NastyBasty
Right Wrong bilateral ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Lawrence” Created by revcruz for The 50 Ambigram Project.
Ambigram   Lawrence by revcruz 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Samantha/Marcianne” Created to be inked as a tattoo by wowtattoos.
Samantha Marcianne ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Dirty/Clean”Via npgraphicdesign

Dirty Clean ground ambigram 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Harry Potter” An entry for the Flickr Ambigram Challenge by NastyBasty
harry potter ambigram

“Charlie Chang” 180° rotational ambigram of the name CHARLIE CHANG by Burn
charlie chang

“Shub-Niggurath” via unterart

Shub Niggurath ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Phat Beats” By Burn

Phat Beats ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Pepsi” via mirving123

Pepsi ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“KRANE” Created for Crane DPC by PAC1972.

KRANE ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Anj” Another ambigram created by revcruz for The 50 Ambigram Project.
Ambigram   Anj new 2 by revcruz 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Child’s Play” via Imriaylde

Child Play ambigram design 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Manila” via ambigram.com

manila 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“City of Brotherly Love” Created by John Langdon.
john langdon 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“San Francisco” via ambigram.com

sanfrancisco 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Woodstock” Another ‘quick & dirty’ lunchtime ambigram via unterart
woodstock 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Cafe” via unterart

cafe 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Nyarlathotep” via unterart

Nyarlathotep 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“1984″ via unterart

1984 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Sins” Created by only-adrian

sins 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Ambigram” Created by arpad

ambigram 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Air” Robert Langdons ambigram Air, from the book Angels and Deamons
air 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Reverse engineering” By Scott Kim

reverse engineering 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“A love of love” Created by Johan Skylling.

alot of love 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Peta” Rotationally symmetrical ambigram of Peta’s name.
peta 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Paris” via npgraphicdesign

paris 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Ektopia” Papper & Penna’s Ekoptia Rotational Ambigram
Ektopia 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

“Chopin” Created by Daniel Dostal

chopin 40 Cool and Creative Ambigram Designs

Brands we are familiar with..

Ambigram in domain names

  • doxob.com
  • ap.xozzox.de
  • http://ap.xozzox.de//:dtty
  • http://graner.net/nicolas/selcoiu/tau.jauejb//:dtty
  • 66.gg

References

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google china g.cn video creative challenge – billiards


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Creative Small Business Marketing, Episode 6

cartI don’t know if this idea worked, but I love the clever thinking. Even if it didn’t work, the small business owner gets an “A” for effort and creativity. It’s social media marketing with a huge twist. Here’s the story:

Guy owns an auto repair shop. Goes to Costco and fills a cart with huge masses of food and drink. Logs on to Reddit.com and posts an article inviting everyone to come to his repair shop for a barbecue/party. Here’s a screenshot from the original story/offer:

reddit

He posted some photos of the food he bought, his repair shop, tied it into a Facebook event so that people can spread the event around to their friends, and best of all … offered a “free dent/ding removal per person” during the party — free samples are huge and a great way to earn new customers.

The obvious question is, Does Reddit have enough users in the Santa Clara area to have made this worth the guy’s time/effort? Even if not, he’s created goodwill in a social media community that will likely reward him to some degree with links and future buzz.

All that for a case full of food and an afternoon doing some free dent repair. Not too shabby if you ask me.

(found via Samir Balwani on Twitter – thx!)

This is a post from Matt McGee’s blog, Small Business Search Marketing.

Creative Small Business Marketing, Episode 6

Related posts:

  1. Creative Small Business Marketing, Episode 5
  2. Creative Small Business Marketing, Episode 4
  3. Creative Small Business Marketing, Episode 3

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30 Creative and Unique Free Fonts

30 Creative and Unique Free Fonts

Everyone love free fonts. If you want to be a bit different, you can use these creative fonts to make sure that your designs will stand out.

Note: Before using any fonts on your projects, it’s important to read the licensing agreement!

Interested in seeing more articles about fonts? Also check out the following related articles:

1. MDRS-FD01

MDRS-FD01

2. Labrat

Labrat

3. TYPORM01 Round ans Square

TYPORM01 Round ans Square

4. SquaretypeB

squaretypeB

5. Knarf art font

Knarf art font

6. Velocity

Velocity

7. Synthetique

Synthetique

8. Amputa Bangiz Standard TTF

Amputa Bangiz Standard TTF

9. Giant Head

Giant Head

10. Snickles

Snickles

11. Times New Yorker

Times New Yorker

12. Vintage

Vintage

13. GOCA LOGOTYPE

GOCA LOGOTYPE

14. Parallello

Parallello Font

15. Karabine

Karabine

16. Infected

Infected

17. Facet

Facet

18. Drift Type

Drift Type

19. Multistrokes

Multistrokes

20. Cat Basah Kental!!!

Cat Basah Kental!!!

21. Que FONTita

Que FONTita

22. Confessions

Confessions

23. Madredeus

Madredeus

24. Vtks Revolt

Vtks Revolt

25. Exus Pilot

Exus Pilot

26. VAL

VAL

27. Outlaw

Outlaw

28. Kilogram

Kilogram

29. Ballpark

Ballpark

30. Orial

Orial

Which ones are your favorite? Did you discover any new fonts that you downloaded and will use in your design projects?

Related Content

About the Author

Tomas Laurinavičius is interested in web design, graphic design and web development, based in Lithuania. He’s also the founder of Iniwoo, a site about photoshop, web design, wordpress and inspiration. If you’d like to connect with him, you can follow him on Twitter.

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Creative Criminal: Aden

Aden is a Royal Bengal Tiger, born in Bangladesh. He was raised by his parents in the Wonderbaums, the largest mangrove forest in the world. His father was responsible for bringing food on the table while his mother took care of her cub. When Aden was about 5 years old, his mother died of a rare disease. Since then, Aden and his father left the mangrove forest due to the bad memory.

The following years Aden’s father thought him everything he should know to survive for the day his father would pass away. A couple years later, when wandering around in Myanmar, hunters trapped Aden and his father. Due to the brute power of his father they got away. This story travelled fast and was noticed by some founders of the largest fighting tournament in Asia. Aden’s father was promised a lot of money if he won the tournament, which would make their life better. The competition was strong but he managed to get to the final round, where he beat his opponent.

Unfortunately the promised money was never given and on top of that the founders tried to burn the room down where they were staying. Luckily Aden and his father found a way out but from that moment young Aden was obsessed with fire. He became a professional fire-fighter but this was not exactly what he wanted. He rather wanted to burn things than extinguish them.

Aden’s collection of flame-throwers expanded over the year, becoming an expert in this field of weaponry. During one of the missions of Kauã, Bossies and Chisulo in China, they needed a fourth to complete the assignment. Since there was no time to fly in another team member, they had to rely on a local force. Aden was picked and due to his strength and capabilities he joined Creative Criminals permanently.


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40 Creative “Transparent Screen” Trick Photos

Here’s an easy optical illusion you can do to make your laptop or computer screen look see-through. The optical illusion of transparent screen is a simple yet effective illusion. These Illusions are created by taking a digital photo of your surroundings then place it as the desktop background of your monitor or screen. That way, they appear to have a fully transparent display.

It kind of reminds us of the The Human Condition, painted by the great surrealist Rene Magritte, who did some paintings on an easel that has been placed inside a room and in front of a window, with the painting completing the scene in the window. Below you’ll see the 40 awesome illusional effects of transparent display. Have fun making your own see-through screen illusions!

See Thru Dell | Yohann Aberkane

iPad | Willow (Chengyin)

ViewSonic | Wormtina

Double Monitor | Kogakure

iPhone Transparent | Edans

Transparent Screen Chess | Bwr

Big Brother | Makobsan

Dell Laptops | Licketyknit

Powerbook | Ryerson

Macbook | Christian C.

HP Tablet | Rev Dan Catt

My Workstation | Perspicuity

iBook G4 | Unrealitymag

Transparent PSP | Alan Rappa

iPhone Transparent Screen | Ocell

Compaq | Sxmon

Kittie | Cyberesque

Transparent Macbook Monitor | Hari Raya

Acer | Tsnaggen

Illusion | danvalger

Mp2id Transparent | Michael

Transparent Toshiba | Little Blue Owl

Inspiron 6400 | Hannjeff87

Srah Srang | 14983

Caffe a computer | Jenga d

Magic Calculator | Elisa

3rd Try | Kingofsnake

Workstation | WVS

See-thru | Jay Divinagracia

Vase | Webgrisu

Transparent PSP | Mar’s Photos

2nd Try | Kingofsnake

Transparent View | Vaguely Artistic

Play Desktop With Me | Karmen Rose

X-Ray | Scienceduck

Experiment | Baptiste Pons

See-thru Laptops | Kap4001

Zentw’s Eye | Stewart

Double Transparent | Jdurchen

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