Illustration by David Fullarton. Made me laugh. Increasingly true. (via Behance Network)
Part of a series of illustrations commissioned by Razorfish to appear in their book FEED, which has just been published. It’s a report on the ways that consumers use new technology and the resulting impact on consumer relationships with brands and advertising. More at http://feed.razorfish.com/
The Architecture of Rudy Hermes (via Visualingual)
In 1959, the architect Rudy Hermes collaborated with the artist Charley Harper on a series of illustrations that situated Ford cars against fantastic backdrops, combining gorgeous natural scenery with outlandish architecture.
Phonetikana - Katakana typeface that has english phonetic sounds embedded - by Johnson Banks (via designboom)
For example, UNIQLO in Japanese is pronounced ‘yoo nee koo roh’ above are the four characters in phonetikana.
Isometric works by felipe Niño. There’s so much information and miniature stories packed into the illustration (a la Where’s Wally), I spent a good whole minute staring at it. Check out the other works in the series.
Modern Mantra by Thomas Broomé. I wonder if it’s the same person behind Peter Bjorn and John’s Living Thing album artwork. (via Visualingual)
Website of the week: Learn Something Everyday / designboom
An ongoing, self initiated project from Young. Each day a trivial fact is illustrated with a simple and humorous drawing.
A Separate Reality 02 by Alex Andreyev. Feels very Hayao Miyazaki. Check out the rest of the stunning illustrations.
The Summer Activity Book for Creatives by Veer in a PDF format. Old-school connect-the-dots, spot-the-odd-one-out, match-the-two fun, designer style.
Indian Pavilion for Shanghai World Expo 2010 mimics ancient Buddhist monument. Just two comments: 1) I’ve seen better graphics in Second Life. 2) Suddenly, the Chinese Pavilion doesn’t look all that sad now. / designboom