UI Experiments by Andrey Yazev
Randomly came across these great experiments by Andrey Yazev of 389.com. Fluid scrollbars: try it for yourself here (you’ll have to be on Safari 4 or Google Chrome to see it).
Zhong
The Chinese word for center, as in Zhong Guo, the name for China, translated as middle kingdom. Spotted in Chinatown, SF.
Red Pixelate: iPhone Adhesive Design
Red Pixelate is the second design in my pixelate series. This time, it’s specifically designed to scale for an iPhone. I’m still working on the design scaled for a laptop. Just got work that Red Pixelate is now up for voting at Infectious for the next 12 days. Products are made based on votes and ...
Ideacodes Designs Honk
Ideacodes worked with Honk on the original design and UI for their private beta release. Honk is a social platform for car shoppers that gathers and shares opinions and insights from like-minded people to make the process of discovering cars simple, social, and most of all, fun. Powering Honk’s search tool is a social recommendation ...
Thirty Conversations on Design
Thirty Conversations on Design 30 of the world’s most inspired creatives answer two straightforward yet incredibly complex questions: “What single example of design inspires you most?” and “What problem should design solve next?” Via Brain Pickings on PicoCool
Twitter Lists
I took a screenshot of the Twitter lists following me at the moment. Undoubtedly, the “listed” number will be used as another metric of social influence, but that’s not what I find intriguing. It’s the self-curated/created nature of lists that I like. It’s been insightful, humbling and amusing to see what lists I’m added to. ...
Web Open Font Format Moves Ahead
From Ars Technica: Efforts to bring advanced typography to the Web have reached an important milestone. Type designers Tal Leming and Erik van Blokland, who had been working to developing the .webfont format, combined forces with Mozilla’s Jonathan Kew, who had been working independently on a similar format. The result of the collaboration is called ...
Frank Stella’s Adelante
Adelante (1964) by Frank Stella painting | metallic powder in polymer emulsion on canvas Saw this again in person on Saturday at SFMOMA. One of my favorite paintings. The lines are made from the negative spacing between the polymer. Gorgeous in its subtlety.







