design

The Singing Subway

http://youtu.be/z6nNsqY-qYM

James Murphy, formerly of LCD Soundsystem, has had a dream for 14 years: To make the New York Subway sing.

 

Currently each ticket gate on the subway is programmed to make a noise every time a commuter passes through. By default that noise is a predictably angry chirp. chooOPP!

 

James wants to re-engineer each set of gates to sing the parts of a major chord. Together the gates would function something like a wind chime.

 

This means at quiet times a gentle, church-like hymn might tinkle through the empty subway spaces. At peak hour an ever-evolving, chiming symphony would sing along with the hustle of the crowd.

 

It’s such a brutal city – and I love it. But I think one little gift of kindness would be nice“.

 

What’s more, James wants to compose different signature sounds for each station. In theory, as you approach your home station you’ll know where you are without looking up from your book, just by the ambient G major melody in the background.

 

After a long campaign, it’s seeming likely that James’ idea will be adopted. With an average weekday ridership of nearly 9 million, this relatively small and inexpensive change can impact a lot of ears and minds.

 

While the NYC Subway is only one application, it is a very visible one and could influence a lot of designers and thinkers to think more about sound.

 

I think this is a great idea. Fingers crossed.

 

Alex Walker
@alexmwalker
SitePoint Design Channel

Editor

(Via SitePoint : http://sitepointnewsletters.cmail20.com/t/ViewEmail/y/0D3AEF3884DA9823/AACFAC09D80DC0A7B3138EAD4DECE712 )

Corporate Executives Climbing Shoe

This looks like something I would make…

spiky-pushpin-shoe

http://www.amazon.com/Corporate-Executives-Climbing-Shoe/dp/B00JDPAD9G/ref=art_owfa_atf_1

 

Giornale Nuovo: Greetings from…

Giornale Nuovo: Greetings from…

Occasionally, printers will run disposable sheets of paper through the press several times in order to fine-tune the press, or to clean the rollers. The resulting “setup sheets” often display random overlays of images and type from various unrelated print jobs.

A great resource for those of us who cannot afford a real Rauschenberg, setup sheets have long been admired and collected by graphic artists for the happy incidents that adorn them. In fact, certain recent designs could be described as software-assisted attempts to recreate that fortuitous look. Here are some examples from my collection, which I hope you will enjoy.

 

caravaggio-venezia postcard01 postcard02 postcard03 postcard04 postcard05
(But, then, I should really just shut my bloody trap. Shouldn’t I.)