
Wednesday, 21 October 2020
mindfulness adjacent

a journalistic backronym
Tuesday, 20 October 2020
nuova tendenza
vitalienbrรผder
Executed by means of a beheading that as capitial punishment goes was extraordinarily dramatic on this day in 1401 (*1360), Klaus Stรถrtebeker (see previously for more of the lore) was the leader of a band of privateers—the Victual Brothers—engaged to supply Stockholm with provisions during a siege with Denmark.
Once their services were no longer needed after peace was achieved, they continued their piracy, adopting the new name for their group “Likedeelers”—the equal-sharers, maintaining a stronghold in East Frisia. Threatened with disruption to trade, a fleet of ships from Hanseatic Hamburg finally took on Stรถrtebeker, double-crossed by a disgruntled mate who sabotaged his escape vessel, and brought the fugitive back to city to stand trial. Despite offers to exchange a gold band long enough to encircle Hamburg for the freedom of him and his crew, Stรถrtebeker and seventy-three of his companions were sentenced to death for their crimes. The Lord Mayor did agree to acquises to one last request: that Stรถrtebeker be beheaded first and that all men he could pass after decapitation would be spared. Stรถrtebeker’s body rose (minus the head) and managed to walk past eleven crewmates before being tripped up. The Lord Mayor, however, did not honour those wishes.
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, ๐ฉ๐ฐ, ๐ธ๐ช, ๐, myth and monsters
7x7
whose side is justice department hunk trant finglepoz on, anyway: a treasury of Hallmark Channel movies counting down to the American election
moving pictures: TIME magazine showcases one hundred of the most influential photographs
malochio: an appreciation of the iconic, inspired CBS eye-logo
giant steps: exploring the overlapping sensory experience of synaesthesia (previously) to the musical stylings of John Coltrane
nazcat lines: archaeologists uncover a feline geoglyph in the Peruvian desert
stranger danger: Patch the Pony transformed into a Halloween soundtrack
fiscal cliffication: continued delays and deferment on financial aid will make it harder for the US economy to recover
Monday, 19 October 2020
i’ll take the high road and you’ll take the low road
font specimen
Boing Boing brings us a nice retrospective appreciation of the life and work of the recently departed typographer Ephram Edward (Ed) Benguiat (*1927), whose expansive family of fonts every one of us has surely encountered and used—Bookman, ITC Avant Garde, Panache, Souvenir—plus his formatting, layout and logotype for periodicals including Esquire, Playboy, Reader’s Digest, the San Diego Tribune newspaper and Sport Illustrated.
Beginning his work in graphic design just after World War II as a so called “cleavage retoucher,” Benguiat was part of a team assigned to airbrush out nudity or otherwise suggestive images in film and magazines to comply with Hays Code impositions, however by the 1970s his signature aesthetic for display typefaces and titles was in the kerning—regarded as “sexy spacing” between letters, flirtatiously not quite touching. Aside from movie posters and corporate campaigns for Super Fly (1972), Planet of the Apes (1968) and Foxy Brown (1974, ITC Caslon, № 224), Benguiat also was responsible for the opening credits sequence for the prestige television series Stranger Things. Learn more at the links above.Sunday, 18 October 2020
try the grey stuff - it's delicious, don't believe me, ask the dishes
Best thing I’ve seen in a few days.
— Rex Chapman๐๐ผ (@RexChapman) October 18, 2020
“Wear A Mask” to “Be Our Guest”
Brilliant... pic.twitter.com/qGoYlLmKjA