Highlight from the People!

Monterey Bay Aquarium Logo
Frederick Usher, 1950

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Gaming company websites in the 90s. The dark design was very popular for these sites at the time. Id Software, Nintendo, SEGA, Empire Interactive, and more.
https://t.co/l8vhli1VoC

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Cubadust website evolution 2001–2004
Portfolio of Swedish designer Jonas Strandberg-Ringh

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Highlight from the People!

Wes Wilson, Butterfield Blues Band at the Fillmore
Designed by David Byrd, 1967
Offset Lithograph, 21x14

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Celebrating Women Designers!
Ellen Raskin
Troika book cover, 1963
A Wrinkle in Time, 1962
Nothing Ever Happens on My Block, 1966
.

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Celebrating Women Designers!
Louise E. Jefferson
.
A founding member of the Harlem Artists Guild, she was a designer and cartographer of picto-maps. She wrote, illustrated, and designed The Decorative Arts of Africa 1973.
.

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Celebrating Women Designers!
Linda Lucero
.
¡Viva Puerto Rico Libre! 1975.
Lucero's poster features Lolita Lebrón who stormed the US Capitol in 1954, fighting for the independence of Puerto Rico.

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Celebrating Women Designers!
Vanessa Bell
.
Three Guineas, 1938. Jacob's Room, 1922. The Years, 1937
Vanessa was a designer, painter, interior designer, and sister to Virginia Woolf, author of these books.
.

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Celebrating Black Designers! Emmett McBain
.
Trans World Airlines sketch, undated.
​Playboy Jazz All Stars 1957.
​David Carroll & His Orchestra, Dance Date, 1960
​.

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The collection of flash websites in graphic style techno. The golden times of web design :-)
https://t.co/ezbYIRe4bD

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Celebrating Black Designers! Leroy Winbush
Exhibition Design
LaSalle Street Banks, Chicago
Chicago Museum of Science and Industry
.

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Navigation in circles with creative elements was popular at the turn of the millennium. Do you remember any similar sites with this navigation?

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Celebrating Black Designers! Charles C. Dawson
.
ABCs of Great Negroes, Dawson Publishers, 1933, collection of the Art Institute of Chicago ory
.

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‘Last things last’, https://t.co/JBNJ622x7N

It’s not a case of ‘us and them’!

Ken Garland addresses an issue left unsaid in his 1964 First Things First manifesto: an acknowledgement of the client’s essential role in graphic design

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