Design Lifestyle – Detroit https://detroit.aiga.org Thu, 14 Feb 2013 20:57:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://detroit.aiga.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/AIGA-DET-LOGO-2017-C-1.png Design Lifestyle – Detroit https://detroit.aiga.org 32 32 Member Spotlight: Shane Xian https://detroit.aiga.org/member_spotligh_9/ https://detroit.aiga.org/member_spotligh_9/#respond Wed, 22 Aug 2012 19:32:32 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/member_spotligh_9/ shane.jpg Born in China, raised in Los Angeles and recently transplanted to Detroit, it's safe to say Shane has a unique perspective on a variety of cultures and the design they inspire. She's made the most of her skills and time since arriving in Detroit a little over a year ago -- whether it's in the classroom, in the design community, or enjoying some pure Michigan cuisine. ]]> xian_01web-thumb-300x200
Shane Xian
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
PORTFOLIO: http://work.shanex.biz/
PINTEREST: http://pinterest.com/snappypanda/pins/
Born in China, raised in Los Angeles and recently transplanted to Detroit, it’s safe to say Shane has a unique perspective on a variety of cultures and the design they inspire. She’s made the most of her skills and time since arriving in Detroit a little over a year ago — whether it’s in the classroom, in the design community, or enjoying some pure Michigan cuisine.
Can you give us a brief background of yourself? Your history? Your accomplishments?
I was born in China, but moved to L.A. with my parents in 2001. I attended Art Center College of Design for advertising and came to Detroit about a year ago to study graphic design at CCS. The WUIs project was featured in the Art Center Student Gallery. My Urban Plotters work and a few more are featured in Art Center’s Behance Gallery as well. Currently, I am working at Detroit Creative Corridor Center on the 2012 Detroit Design Festival as one of the lead designers.
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What made you interested in design?
I’ve been a visual person for as long as I can remember. I’ve been collecting provocative visuals for a long time, and started playing with Photoshop and Illustrator in my teenage years. As a result, I ended up in design and love every bit of it.
How has growing up in Los Angeles influenced your work, and how has your move to Detroit shaped or changed it?
I think growing up in a culturally diverse place like L.A. has definitely opened my eyes terms of how far boundaries can be pushed and how things work. L.A. planted the seed of ambition in me. My year spent in Detroit has shown me another side of the story, another lifestyle, another culture and another mindset. Detroit has definitely challenged my problem-solving skills and made me more courageous. I’ve also gained a lot of spiritual growth while living here.
What differences (or similarities) in design culture have you noticed between the two cities?
I think the differences in design culture between the two cities are relevant to the different historical and cultural experiences. I think the two cities have different approaches when it comes to design. One is more focused on presentation and presence, while the other has certain authenticity to it. Overall, I hope to see more design enthusiasts and design awareness in Detroit.
What inspires you?
All kinds of things. But to name a few: Film – Stanley Kubrick, Quentin Tarantino, Sofia Coppola. Fashion – Givenchy, Valentino, Issey Miyake A lot of things also comes from observing daily lives, reading blogs and lots of youtube videos. The littlest details do a lot for me.
Do you have a favorite designer/artist (or a few)?
I think with the internet age it’s hard to have a favorite, or even a few. Every day I go on Behance, Designspration, and Vimeo, and I always find a few designers that I love that I had no idea about yesterday, and they all have amazing work. So it’s hard for me to pick a favorite.
What is your favorite Michigan-made product?
Michigan pretty much converted me to beerism. All of these local breweries have delicious beers. The BBQ scene is really amazing too. I love Bert’s ribs.
What is your favorite aspect of AIGA?
AIGA is a great platform for us to meet each other and have this network of support and inspiration.
What does your work space look like?
My workspace can be in the beautiful DC3 office, or my living room with Netflix on, or coffee shops like Fourteen East on Woodward and Kirby. It’s just me and my laptop. So it’s more fun to hop around.
What have been some of of your favorite projects from the past year?
My favorite projects from the last year has to be Ann Arbor Film Festival and Urban Plotters.
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A Q&A with FontHaus’ Mark Solsburg https://detroit.aiga.org/fonthaus_qa/ https://detroit.aiga.org/fonthaus_qa/#respond Tue, 26 Jun 2012 15:31:06 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/fonthaus_qa/ fonthaus.png Mark Solsburg, founder and CEO of Ann Arbor-based FontHaus, was kind enough to share a bit about how FontHaus came to be, and his fascinating experience with the ever-evolving business of typography. Yes, we even asked him what some of his favorite fonts are. ]]> solsburg
Mark Solsburg, founder and CEO of Ann Arbor-based FontHaus, was kind enough to share a bit about how FontHaus came to be, and his fascinating experience with the ever-evolving business of typography. Yes, we even asked him what some of his favorite fonts are.
FontHaus is currently a Partner Bold with AIGA Detroit. As part of this partnership, AIGA Detroit members receive a 12% discount on just about everything on fonthaus.com. To redeem your discount, you must register on fonthaus.com (which you must do to make a purchase) and there will be a place within the form to indicate your AIGA Detroit membership. Be prepared to enter your membership ID. Once your are registered, every time you log in to your fonthaus.com account, 12% will automatically be discounted on just about everything once you reach checkout. The discount will not be applied to items already discounted or on sale.

How did FontHaus come about?

The original U.S. FontShop morphed into what is now FontHaus. In 1988 Joan and Erik Spiekermann, co-founders of FontShop, approached me to open a FontShop Office in the U.S. At that time I was working for International Typeface Corporation (ITC) in New York City, and the Spiekermanns had just opened offices in Berlin, London and Toronto. Neville Brody was heading up the London office and Ed Cleary, the Toronto office. Joan and Erik had Berlin and I was to open in Norwalk, Connecticut. The U.S. was to be my territory. After I left ITC and as discussions with the Spiekermanns evolved, so did disagreements as to how the U.S. office was to brand the FontShop name and market its program. In 1990, my fit with FontShop became incompatible and I founded FontHaus. The name was my wife’s idea and the logo design was Jonathan Hoefler‘s. That was how it all started.

Why Ann Arbor, Michigan?

I was born in Detroit and grew up in Michigan. I left for New York in 1985 seeking fame and fortune and found neither. I spent the next 22 years on the east coast, always thinking about when I would/could return “home.” In 2007, I did. As a result of the Internet, the font business had become independent of needing a geographic location. There was no longer a need for an office space complete with inventory, shipping departments and telephone sales people all together in one place with a kitchenette, grown-up conference room, security system and operator. At this point I saw my opportunity to move back to Michigan, so my wife, son and I did. Although I had never lived in Ann Arbor before, it seemed to be the best fit for a lot of reasons, including being in close range to my family. In short, I missed Michigan as my “home” and I missed my family.

How did you get into this business?

As an undergraduate student and later as a grad, I worked as a graphic designer to pay my tuition. Although I remember first learning about type from Jerry Campbell back in the early 70s at Arts and Crafts (now CCS), I don’t recall putting a whole lot of focus on type into my design. Looking back however, I can see that I did. Unconsciously, I liked playing with type and letterforms. Many years later, this apparently impressed one of the many head hunters I interviewed with in New York. I impressed him enough to have him send me over to ITC. They had an opening in their marketing department. That was 1984. I soon learned this was a very special company dedicated to preserving and promoting the highest standards of type and type in design. They were like no other company — I got lucky. This was a dream job. During the five or so years working for ITC, I not only had met and befriended some of the greatest living legends of type (Matthew Carter, Hermann Zapf, Adrian Frutiger, Eric Spiekermann, Bradbury Thompson, Zuzana Licko, and Neville Brody to name a few), I learned a great deal about type and the business of type. I carried these relationships and knowledge with me when I founded FontHaus.

How have you seen the type business evolve over the years, and how has FontHaus stayed on top of (and adapted to) these changes? What obstacle(s) have been the most challenging?

There were a few major events that reshaped the type business since I arrived in New York in the mid-80s. First, there was the evolution of type technology — not only in how type was designed, but also in how it was distributed. Type was moving from analog to digital. This opened the doors to selling type directly to designers so they could set type themselves for the first time in history. The big type houses went out of business, and this opened the doors to new businesses selling just digital type to the new media producers (desktop publishers). Adobe led the charge, along with smaller companies like FontShop, FontHaus, Faces and Emigre to name a few. Then, with the advent of the Internet, the distribution of digital fonts changed. At first, digital fonts were sold in “clamshells” and shipped by air and ground. With the Internet, fonts could now be delivered online. A designer could find a font online, order it and have it sent to their desktop in minutes. This was huge. I’m proud to say FontHaus was among the first to distribute fonts this way back in 1994. Everyone else soon followed. FontHaus has survived through the years because we were lucky enough to sense new technology developments and distribution methods, and position ourselves to take advantage of market tends in type design. It also helped that we were small — we could react to market demand quickly. We could turn on a dime. Our biggest challenge today is that we are still small. Companies that came in after us are cash rich, can market circles around us, and are consuming just about any font asset they want. These companies are also merging and consolidating.
Future challenges have to do with web fonts and font distribution. As more and more communication becomes available on a screen, good screen type becomes more and more interesting and popular. Web type is used and licensed differently. Licensing and security technology standards have yet to become a reality and type designers and distributors are not all on the same page.

We see that you have the title of being the first independent font retailer in the U.S. How does this set FontHaus apart from other retailers? Are there other characteristics that make FontHaus different?

Yes, we were the first independent font retailer in the U.S. However, we were not the first font retailer here. That recognition may need to go to Bitstream, Emigre, Adobe, Linotype or Compugraphic. But being the first comes with the challenge of staying first — especially when showing others that there is a new business opportunity they can take advantage of.
Over the years we continually sought ways to break new ground with regard to marketing, selling and distributing fonts. As mentioned above we were among the very few selling fonts online back in 1994. Within a few years, everyone else was on board doing the same. We were among the first (if not the first) to also sell extended licenses online. Soon after, others were offering the same service. We were among the first to sell single fonts when the competition was satisfied with selling families, volumes, and collections. That changed after they realized there was a business in selling singles. FontHaus was the first to offer an interactive type previewing feature that we named “PlayBox” back in the mid-90s. This feature is now the norm with most fonts distributors. We were also the first and only independent font retailer to publish a type magazine/catalog. We named it x-height. x-height was launched in the early 90s and was mailed to our customer base. It had relevant stories, editorial and interviews on type and on the type industry. The back end of the magazine was a catalog sampling of the fonts we were featuring. To a certain degree it was modeled after ITC’s U&lc. U&lc was a magnificently designed, award-winning type marketing publication. It was mailed quarterly to designers worldwide announcing and displaying new ITC typefaces. U&lc was the marketing machine that fueled ITC. It was the genius of Herb Lubalin, Aaron Burns and Ed Rondthaler. The last U&lc was published in mid-1999.
x-height was published through 1996. Although I loved my role as publisher and the great team we had built to produce OUR quarterly, it was the victim of the rising costs of paper and postage. We still get inquiries, mostly from abroad, as to when the next edition is coming out…
Today, our identity as a quality font distributor is somewhat overshadowed by our bigger, publicly traded competitors. Nevertheless, we believe in our market and in this business. Recently, we have partnered with a company out of the U.K to market their high-end royalty free photo images and vector graphics. We have always believed that those who buy fonts also buy pictures. This site is named FontsandPhotos.com. The photo licensing programs we offer on F&P are among the most competitive in the industry. Our strategy is to cross-pollinate two market groups by introducing our type buyers to a new source for photos and our photo buyers to a new source for their type. Most recently, we launched a font discount membership program called FontClub™. A small fee gives members a 10% discount on just about everything on our site for a year. This program is successful and it is the first of its kind in the type industry.
Have there been any particularly memorable type trends that stand out to you? Scripts have become the most popular out of the tens of thousands of fonts we offer. It seems like many designers are satisfied with their few sans and serifs, but scripts serve as an exciting, interesting and useful complement to basic stand-bys. Ironically, script fonts, especially the connecting scripts, are the hardest fonts to design and build. Only the most experienced and talented designers can pull off a good script.

What is your favorite part of being in the font/typography business?

The designers and the marketing. Type designers are among the most interesting, intelligent and creative people I know. Most have a great sense of humor too. Otherwise, I love marketing type. I get to play with type in design. They are like toys. I’m so fortunate to have so many to play with every day.

Are there a any interesting aspects of the type industry that most people aren’t aware of?

The type designers. So few know the designers behind the type and how difficult and time-consuming it is to design a single typeface. Most don’t realize know how much knowledge is required to design a good typeface and how little the majority of type designers earn on their fonts. Yes, some have gotten very wealthy while others produce good fonts that end up gathering dust. It’s a tough business. I’ve found that there are many parallel challenges in the music business.

Forgive us for being cheesy — but what is your favorite font currently? What have been some of your favorites in the past?

Well, my favorites change quite often. Currently, Mark Simonson’s Proxima Nova Condensed, MVB Solano Gothic, Anatoletype’s Scritta Nuova, Parachute’s Champion Script, their DIN and their Centro Suite. In the past, ITC Officina, Group Type’s Bank Gothic, EF’s Petras Script, Lucas Fonts’ Thesis and ATF Franklin Gothic.

How did you first hear about AIGA? What made you decide to become a partner?

I’ve been aware of the AIGA since I moved to New York City in 1985. When I moved back to Michigan, I learned about the good works of the Detroit chapter through Chad Reichert. I have always loved this state and want it to do better. If I can help even a little by having the FontHaus here and not elsewhere, it would make me feel good. If I can help the designers in this state, even a little (with discounted fonts for example), I would feel even better. It’s personal.

What is your favorite part of being part of the AIGA community?

I enjoy associating with some of the best designers in the midwest and the AIGA Detroit’s various and interesting programs. Just a few weeks ago, it was great to see two old friends of mine talking about type at Ann Arbor’s Michigan Theatre as featured guests of AIGA Detroit. I’ve known Matthew Carter and Roger Black since my very early days at ITC. I was pleased and proud of the the AIGA’s initiative to support such an event with such remarkable type industry icons, here in Michigan. Bravo!

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The Rust Belt Series: A Traveling Artist Market https://detroit.aiga.org/the_rust_belt_s/ https://detroit.aiga.org/the_rust_belt_s/#respond Sat, 02 Jun 2012 02:08:56 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/the_rust_belt_s/ website-rustbelt-image.jpg Maker. Artist. Small creative business owner. Do any of these titles describe who you are and what you do? Or do you enjoy the craft they provide? If so, you're going to want to keep an eye on this budding Cleveland and Pittsburgh-based organization. ]]> website-rustbelt-image-thumb-600x273
Maker. Artist. Small creative business owner.
Do any of these titles describe who you are and what you do? Or do you appreciate the craft they provide? If so, you’re going to want to keep an eye on this budding Cleveland and Pittsburgh -based organization. We’re excited to spread the word about The Indie Foundry and what they stand for. Detroit’s not alone in its status as a Rust Belt city, and to quote The Indie Foundry’s creators Stephanie Sheldon (a Detroit native and University of Michigan grad) and Carrie Nardini, “a rising tide lifts all ships.”
The Indie Foundry is assembling events collectively named The Rust Belt Series and we encourage you to participate!

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What is The Indie Foundry all about?
It started as a conversation with between founders Carrie Nardini (www.imadeitmarket.com) and Stephanie Sheldon (www.helloparfait.com) about what their individual and common challenges were in this business (and what they would benefit from) and it grew into a full-fledged event. The organization is centered around the hope that that it will inspire more “pop-up” markets aimed at the small creatives who want to see their businesses grow, flourish and possibly even take root in their Rust Belt communities. The Indie Foundry will offer online and in-person resources, networking, workshops, traveling marketplaces and the opportunity to learn from professionals who have expertise that speaks directly to what small business owners need.
What is The Rust Belt Series?
The Rust Belt Series is a traveling Artisan Market and Networking Event, and the first one is being held in Market Square Park in Cleveland’s Ohio City Neighborhood, a real life example of how small, craft businesses are taking root and transforming the landscape of our post-industrial cities. Vendors can sell their goods across from the Historic West Side Market, meet other creatives, explore Cleveland with an after party and tour, and walk away with contacts and ideas that will allow their business to grow beyond what they are today. The Indie Foundry, made up of creative duo Stephanie Sheldon and Carrie Nardini, will be on hand to provide you with advice and tools on branding, website design, social media & copy writing, photography, and other needs that “artistpreneurs” have when launching their businesses.
When is it?
The first event in the series will be held Saturday, June 9 from 10am to 4pm in Market Square Park in The Ohio City Neighborhood in Cleveland, Ohio with an after party for Vendors at Market Garden Brewery starting at 5:00
The event will also mark as a kickoff to the Open Air in Market Square Artist Market that officially begins on June 23.
How can you be a part of it?
If you’d like to be a part of this awesome first event, and many more, fill out the Vendor Application.
Is there more information? Who can you contact if you have questions?
To find out more about The Indie Foundry and the Rust Belt Series, visit indiefoundry.com. Please contact Carrie or Stephanie at indiefoundry@gmail.com if you have additional questions.
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AIGA’s National Student Membership Drive! https://detroit.aiga.org/aigas_national/ https://detroit.aiga.org/aigas_national/#respond Sat, 11 Feb 2012 04:00:24 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/aigas_national/ student.jpg Have we got a deal for you. Through February 20, if you're registered for at least six credit hours, you can join AIGA for the first time or renew your membership online for only $50. ]]> Calling all students!
Have we got a deal for you. Through February 20, 2012, if you’re registered for at least six credit hours, you can join or renew your AIGA membership online for only $50. Why is this a big deal? Because you’re saving $45 by taking advantage of this special offer.
Why join AIGA?

  • Gain exposure by posting your portfolio in the AIGA Member Gallery.
  • Find jobs and internships in AIGA Design Jobs.
  • Network and learn at local and national events. (Check out our Detroit-area upcoming events here)
  • Access exclusive member benefits, such as discounts on software, subscriptions and more .

Get all the information you’ll need about student membership including a list of benefits and how to join or renew here: http://www.aiga.org/membership-student/
A Special Offer for Graduating Student Members
At graduation, student members receive a special offer to renew at 50 percent off the associate level. That’s a savings of more than $100. To take advantage of this offer:

  1. Make sure we have your graduation date on file by updating your anticipated graduation date at My AIGA
  2. Renew online after graduation–your dues will be automatically adjusted to the discounted rate when your expected

graduation date has passed
Take advantage of this deal while you can, and join a truly incredible community.

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Member Spotlight: Andrew Reaume https://detroit.aiga.org/member_spotlight_andrew_reaume/ https://detroit.aiga.org/member_spotlight_andrew_reaume/#respond Mon, 16 Jan 2012 23:58:12 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/member_spotlight_andrew_reaume/ adrwreaume-intro.jpg Each month or so, we like to spotlight one of the many talented members of our AIGA Detroit community. This time we are featuring Andrew Reaume, a freelance graphic designer based in Ypsilanti and a graduate of Eastern Michigan University. ]]> adrwreaume-300w.jpgEach month or so, we like to spotlight one of the many talented members of our AIGA Detroit community. This time we are featuring Andrew Reaume (http://www.adrwrdesign.com/). Andrew is a freelance graphic designer based in Ypsilanti and a graduate of Eastern Michigan University.
Can you give us a brief background of yourself? Your history? Your accomplishments?
I am a Michigan native, raised in the smallish town of Brighton. Growing up I was always a creative kid. I liked to write music, write stories, make art, and immerse myself in movies and music. By high school it was clear I wanted to do something with art, but it wasn’t until I began the graphic design program at Eastern Michigan University that design really clicked for me. As a designer, I discovered an interest in working within a variety of media and experimenting with how they can work together. As a result, I’ve found motion design to be especially appealing, since it combines time, visuals and audio.
I graduated from EMU with a BFA in Fine Arts, and since then have worked for various firms and organizations. More recently, I have been freelancing and working as a graphic designer for the Michigan Suburbs Alliance, a non-profit based in Ferndale, Mich. In my spare time, I like to play the singing saw and mandolin, and maintain my blog, slowly upwards, which aims to provide resources for fellow designers and document various projects I’m experimenting with. My work has been featured by the Ann Arbor Film Festival, the AIGA members gallery, and has been selected for the semi-finals of the 2011 Adobe Design Achievement awards.
Could you show us a sampling of your work?
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What interested you in design?
Like so many other art students in college, I originally got into design because I knew I liked art and I knew I could get a job with [graphic design]. However, once I got deeper into the program I found design really resonated with me. I’ve always been a very analytical and pragmatic thinker– maybe at times to a detrimental extent. With graphic design, I discovered that these attributes were a major part of the core of creating great design, and I’ve been obsessed with it ever since.
I think most design begins with an objective or question, and as designers we are tasked with coming up with the most creative, visual way of communicating the objective or answer. I’ve become particularly interested in using this same methodology of design and using it to explore psychological or metaphysical concepts.
What inspires you?
Music, Philosophy, and anything that tells a good narrative.
Do graphic designers have a special responsibility to promote a green society?
I think anyone who is lucky enough to cultivate and possess a great ability or skill shares a responsibility to use it in a positive way at some level. I think it is important to have some meaning behind the work you do. For someone to pass on the opportunity to promote some good and help advance the human race in a positive way seems like an awful waste.
Do you consider graphic design a growing industry?
There is no question– absolutely. The scope of the industry seems to be constantly expanding, in both practice and execution. The extent of this has made it very difficult for me to even understand what being a graphic designer is. As a graphic designer, I can screen-print a poster, create titles for a movie and design and code a website. While these all share many qualities, they are very different jobs. It seems like the range continues to expand. Heck, IDEO helped create better access to clean drinking water in Indian and Africa!
How has living in Michigan shaped your work/design and Who is your favorite Michigan based designer/artist?
On both counts I’d have to say the EMU Art Faculty. I feel so lucky to have been able to learn from such supportive, intelligent, and talented people. Ryan Molloy’s work is especially badass, and is a definite influence of my interest in motion design.
What is your favorite Michigan made product?
In terms of branding, definitely Zingerman’s. Also the microbrewery scene in this state is pretty impressive. I’ve also heard that historically we’ve done some notable work with cars?
What is your favorite aspect of AIGA?
Probably the ease with which it allows designers to connect with other designers in the community. Networking is truly a huge part of our industry (or perhaps any industry) and AIGA is really effective at connecting us to the design community.
What is one thing you can’t live without?
While I’ve tried my damndest to function without it, it appears that I need to sleep.
Who is your favorite designer?
That’s always a tough one. I’ve always loved El Lissitzky, both for the scope in which he worked and also for what he did for the industry. Of more current designers, I have really been admiring the work of Tim Brown and the other people of IDEO. As one who is particularly obsessed with design on the thinking level, seeing what they have been able to achieve through the application of design is quite remarkable.
What are your favorite movies?
So many, but here are a few (in no particular order): Stranger Than Fiction, The Royal Tenebaums, The Day After Tomorrow (the original), I Am So Proud of You, Anything made by Hayao Miyazaki or Pixar, Some bizarre Polish weight lifting video I found while cleaning an old gym (long story).
What are a few of your favorite favorite songs?
Like above (in no particular order): Smells like Content by The Books, Glosoli by Sigur Ros, Rebellion (Lies) by Arcade Fire, Blue Ridge Mountain by Fleet Foxes, Do the Astral Plane by Flying Lotus, Weird Fishes/Arpeggi by Radiohead
What are a few of your favorite books?
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, Art & Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland, Fahrenheight 451, The Sandman series, The Walking Dead Series, The Watchmen
What does your work space look like?
I work at a large house filled with other artists inside our dedicated “art studio”. Amongst other accommodations, it includes a black bunny, blue bird, and a creepy mannequin.
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What is an example of one of your favorite projects from the past year?
Recently I had some fun making a rebuttal ad to Wisconsin’s recent campaign in which they claimed their state looks like a mitten. As if!? If they can be a mitten, we can be cheese, right?
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I also did a personal project not too long ago where I experimented with making a 3d animated typeface, producing a letter a day. The fun part of it was that it left me with this strange typographical creature to work with. I’ve been exploring different ways to use it, and will probably make a useable font out of it sooner or later.
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To find out more about Andrew Reaume and to see more of his work, you can find him in a variety of online capacities:
Portfolio
Blog
Vimeo

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i3 Detroit: Exploring the balance between technology, art and culture https://detroit.aiga.org/with_our_grease/ https://detroit.aiga.org/with_our_grease/#respond Mon, 19 Dec 2011 15:02:57 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/with_our_grease/ Pegboard-crop-1.jpg If you are looking for a perfect (and safe!) space with all the tools you need to craft your winning vehicle for our fast-approaching Greased Up Pinewood Derby, look no further! Matt Oehrlein, president and director of i3 Detroit (located in Ferndale). Takes us inside the "hacker space" and fills us in on all i3 Detroit has to offer to the community. ]]> With our Greased Up Pinewood Derby quickly approaching, we have been on the lookout for places where participants can have the space and tools they need to craft their winning vehicle. Along the way, we discovered i3 Detroit, a hackerspace located in Ferndale.
We caught up with Matt Oehrlein, president and director of i3 Detroit about what a hackerspace is (it’s not as sinister as it sounds), and the tools and resources that such a space provides.


Could you tell us a little about yourself and how you became involved with i3 Detroit?
I moved to Michigan in June for a career opportunity when I graduated college. Knowing no one besides co-workers and some extended family on the other side of the state, I had to make new friends on my own. I knew about hackerspaces before I moved, so I decided to join one to meet like-minded people. A few months later, annual elections for officer positions came up. I wanted to give back to the organization, so I ran for office. Matt Oehrlein, i3 Detroit president, at your service.
What is a hacker space, anyway?
A hackerspace is a physical space where people with common interests in art, and/or technology can collaborate on projects and socialize. The term “hacker space” is a bit of a misnomer. It’s very rare to see anyone doing any malicious hacking. Rather, the term “hacker” comes to mean do-it-yourself improvements or disassembling things to understand and improve them. More and more we see the term “maker space” replacing “hacker space” as a more accurate description of what goes on inside the building.
Could you tell us about i3 Detroit specifically?
i3 Detroit is a collaborative environment for people to explore the balance between technology, art and culture. We feel the best way to create this environment is to bring like mind people together that share a common passion for technology, art and culture.
The community is run by its members through voting. All founding members have worked together to create a set of by-laws that all members and supporters are required to follow. The goal is to provide a safe and fun community environment and to stay a community resource through continuous hosting of various classes and events. We have created an environment that promotes learning in a fun, non-traditional format.
i3 Detroit is continually working with other hackerspaces and community organizations to work on projects, events and educational opportunities.
“i3” stands for Imagine, Innovate and Inspire
How we fund the project:
We fund the project through our Membership dues, Sponsorships, Fundraisers and Donations. All proceeds go towards paying the rent, utilities, insurance, and tools. All financial decisions are voted on by it’s members with voting rights. i3 Detroit is still working towards becoming a 501c3 organization, which will allow us to receive donations to assist us in meeting our purposes.
Our Purposes:

  • To continue to build, maintain and grow our physical space suitable for technical, art and social collaboration.
  • Collaborate on all forms of technology, art and culture in new and interesting ways.
  • Freely share its research and discoveries, using what is learned to teach others.
  • Recruit and develop talented members dedicated to these purposes.
  • To share knowledge, information and our crafts with other members and our communities.

What resources and tools are available to members and supporters?
Woodworking – Band saw, table saw, router table, scroll saw, drill press, hand tools, nail guns, planer, jointer, miter saw, and lathe
Metal working – Table top lathe, drill press, table top mill, metal break, anvil, angle grinders, full size lathe, Industrial Bridgeport CNC Mill , Bridgeport Mill, planishing hammer
Electronics – scopes, function generators, various power supplies, bread boards, soldering and desoldering stations,
Crafting – Cricut cutting machine, Cricut Cuddlebug, Yudu silk screen machine, Industrial sewing machine,vinyl cutter, basic supplies and tools.
Fun Chemistry Lab – Scales, hot plates, various (safe) chemicals, Beakers, Pipettes, Kjeldahl bulbs, Various glass jars and bottles, water traps, and much more.
Podcast Studio – 4 Quality microphones, 1 Mackie mixing board, Recording software, Compressors, Gates, and a mobile studio.
Fab Lab – 100 Watt Laser cutter, CNC plasma table, Makerbot, Vinyl cutter, T-shirt press, Button Maker, Plotter
How can visitors work in your space if they are not members?
If you would like to visit the space, just check the website www.i3detroit.com. Look in the upper right hand corner to see the status of the space. It will say either “open” or “closed”. It’s probably a good idea to give us a call too (248-556-9995) and just ask “Hey, I’m new and I’d like to visit, is anyone going to be around for the next couple hours?” Once you arrive, we’ll get you checked in, and give you a little tour. From there, you are welcome to start working on whatever you’d like (with some supervision if you want to use the big expensive tools like the laser cutter!).
Do you have certain nights that visitors can come and work?
Good nights to stop by are first and third tuesdays of every month. On these days, we have (open) membership meetings at 7:30pm and there are tons of people around. Other times that see a lot of action are open shop Friday nights and all day Saturday, so those are fun times to visit and see the place buzzing.
i3 Detroit
1481 Wordsworth, Ferndale, MI 48220
http://www.i3detroit.com/
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Showcasing Detroit at the AIGA Leadership Retreat https://detroit.aiga.org/at_the_aiga_lea/ https://detroit.aiga.org/at_the_aiga_lea/#respond Wed, 29 Jun 2011 06:11:32 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/at_the_aiga_lea/ Board members from AIGA Detroit attended the National AIGA Leadership Retreat this June. Their mission was to show how the chapter has engaged the Detroit community... ]]> Board members from AIGA Detroit attended the national AIGA Leadership Retreat in Minneapolis, Minnesota this June. More than 250 leaders from across AIGA–chapter board members, national board members and staff–came come together for “Activate,” the 2011 AIGA Leadership Retreat. The goal was to share chapter success stories, learn through breakout sessions & case studies and mingle among AIGA members.
AIGA Detroit president, Colleen Hill, took the stage the share the work the chapter has been doing, such as diversifying programs and workshops.
You can watch Colleen speak in the video below. (We apologize in advance for some of the buzzing sound that makes the video inaudible around the 4 minute mark).

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Experiencing FutureMidwest 2011 https://detroit.aiga.org/experiencing_fu/ https://detroit.aiga.org/experiencing_fu/#respond Sat, 30 Apr 2011 21:20:52 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/experiencing_fu/
We dropped into the region's largest digital business conference to talk technology, start-ups, and the future of Detroit... ]]>
FutureMidwest bannerDetroit is a city in transition and the FutureMidwest conference is intent on showcasing what is possible. Billed as “the region’s largest digital business conference,” this two-day event featured a variety of speakers that work in the digital space. From venture capitalists to web start-ups, the program featured many frank, practical, and hopeful lectures on business and how it can change the city.
All speakers centered on the five principles set by FutureMidwest, which include:

  • Integrated marketing
  • User experience
  • Mobile
  • Business Intelligence/Analytics
  • Regional growth

Topics included everything from digital privacy to ways to improve in marketing campaigns. This year the conference took place at Eastern Market in Detroit. Although an unlikely venue, the ample space allowed attendants to wander and mingle.
The variety and scope of topics discussed gave everyone a lot to think about. Below are a few videos from the event:



The evening session, Funded By Night, featured many web-based start-ups looking to secure funding. Each company presented their product demo and competed for a chance at $100,000. This year, mobile app Gumshoe, won the prize. It was impressive to see all the creative ideas put on display. As a passerby commented, “You don’t see this type of creativity in the valley.”
The conference is put on by FutureMidwest Innovations, which has a variety of initiatives that promote the region, such as Accelerate:Detroit and Lemonade:Detroit. Although still in it’s infancy (this is it’s third year), the conference has been growing each year and will continue to do so. The future is in your hands Detroit.
Photo: Deborah Edwards-Onoro

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Spirits In The Material World https://detroit.aiga.org/spirits_in_the/ https://detroit.aiga.org/spirits_in_the/#comments Tue, 15 Feb 2011 02:35:44 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/spirits_in_the/
Sometimes you pick up a book expecting one thing and come away from it with something else. Something better... ]]>
Keith Richard's Life [image]Sometimes you pick up a book expecting one thing and come away from it with something else. Something better. Take Keith Richard’s memoir, Life. Yes, all the sex, drugs and rock n’roll are in there to be enjoyed. But threaded through the whole affair is the quest tale of a shaman. Time and again, Richards muses on the “notes behind the notes” – the faint echoes and shimmers of phantom notes that transform the ones you hear clearly. Richards’ tuning system, an open G, is expressly deployed to conjure up strange, complementary harmonics with a minimum amount of conscious effort. For a few short years, when the Stones were firing on all cylinders, Richards found plenty of hidden treasure with a six string guitar missing a string.
Bob Dylan offers a similar story in his book, Chronicles V.1. Acting on the advice of U2 frontman Bono, Dylan enlists the Canadian producer Danny Lanois to help craft a record. Dylan soon comes to rue his decision as Lanois gets deeper and deeper in his trademark sonic witchdoctor routine that has produced interesting if uneven results for Willie Nelson, Emmy Lou Harris and Lanois himself. Watching Lanois fidgeting with all kinds of compressors and processors in his quest to build a bewitching soundscape, Dylan wonders what happened to the actual songs. Eventually Dylan buys into Lanois’ process but anyone who has listened to Dylan’s “Love and Theft” record, coming as it does after his second outing with Lanois, can hear strong vibrations of relief, release and good riddance.
I think Richards and Lanois exemplify a lot of artists, perhaps all artists, who seek to tap into an order of the material world that is hiding in plain sight. The great art critic and novelist John Berger suggests that “dogs, with their running legs, sharp noses and developed memory for sounds, are the natural frontier experts of these interstices. Their eyes, whose message often confuses us for it is urgent and mute, are attuned both to the human order and to other visible orders. Perhaps this is why, on so many occasions and for different reasons, we train dogs as guides.”
Evolutionary biologists tell us that our ancestors developed a keen radar for dangers on the ground as they hunted and gathered. Perhaps, the scientists contend, those fleeting glimpses caught out of the corner of the eye (apologies to Pink Floyd and “Comfortably Numb”) are the origins of the religious impulse. We sensed our inability to get a bead on the spirits of the material world and moved them into either mythology or heaven and hell for peace of mind.
For those of us in graphic communication, is it possible to find the notes behind the notes in 2011? We use so much design technology in our work, technology that can easily steal opportunities for true craftsmanship (or draftsmanship for that matter) in the name of efficiency and fad. The work we produce seems to be for smaller and smaller screens that do more and more things viewed by people with shorter and shorter attention spans, not to mention memories. The popular culture favors disposable novelty and clients are locked into it. Slapping together a smartphone ad for a Chevy is just not same as conjuring up a song that will haunt jukeboxes for centuries. Alas, the jukebox is now a glowing box on a wall that charges two bucks to stream one song from a server in Dallas.
Keith Richards is a man lucky enough to have done his best work in an age when the media world moved relatively slow and audiences had the time to join his worthy quest.
Written by: Timothy Dugdale

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Meet the Judges: Eddie Opara https://detroit.aiga.org/meet_the_judges_1/ https://detroit.aiga.org/meet_the_judges_1/#respond Sat, 15 Jan 2011 03:50:06 +0000 http://detroit-staging.aiga.org/meet_the_judges_1/
The AIGA chapters from Detroit and Toledo have teamed up to bring three remarkable judges for the 2011 Design Re:View. We're proud to introduce Eddie Opara as a judge.. ]]>
Eddie OparaEach week the 2011 Design Re:View edges closer and closer. Have you chosen the work you want to submit? All AIGA members are highly encouraged to enter their best work. The AIGA chapters from Detroit and Toledo have teamed up to bring three remarkable judges to the area. Along we Jake Lefebure, who we introduced earlier, designer Eddie Opara will be juding entries.
Eddie is a multi-disciplinary designer, that has worked on projects including large-scale motion graphics, installations, intranet knowledge-bases, software interfaces, print packaging and interior graphics for clients such as Disney Imagineering, Morgan Stanley, Prada and Vitra. His work has appeared in Archis, ID Magazine, Graphis, Surface, and Elle to name a few.
Currently, he is a lecturer at the School of Architecture, Columbia University, and has lectured as a critic at Yale University School Art. Eddie received his Bachelor degree in Graphic Design from London College of Printing. He holds a MFA in Graphic Design from Yale University.
You can meet Eddie Opara, as well as the other judges that will be on hand at the 2011 Design Re:View Judges Night, on Feb. 17. Keep checking this blog to meet the rest of the judges.

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