Archived entries for posters

Grain and Gram… The New Gentleman’s Journal

A new gentleman’s journal has sprung up online, looking rather Monocle-esque. It goes by the name of Grain & Gram and is updated infrequently but with some particular in-depth features with some gorgeous photography and video.

If I am honest, it is a little too much to read for my preference, I prefer to sit with my coffee and watch the equivalent of video but the images are really worth visiting for as I got a great sense of what they were reporting on from purely from this. And for the readers amongst us, there is plenty of text to satisfy.

Their recent feature on Nick Sambrato is fantastic, you can read a little here…

“A man without words is a man without thought.” John Steinbeck, East of Eden.

Nick Sambrato loves what he does and he loves doing it well. It takes only minutes in talking with Nick to find out that he takes what he does seriously, but not in a pretentious way. By showing and striving for quality in what you do, you can show that you are striving for quality in who you are. Late nights, dirty jeans, rough hands, tired eyes, all these things are badges of honor when you’re doing something you love. His work ethic and entrepreneurial drive are what brought him to the world of print, but not the sole reasons for keeping him there.

We love the idea of the craft and the type of man who takes pride in his work — sees what he builds as an extension of himself.

That’s one thing I think of; those guys. My dad was a construction worker. It was his identity. He took pride in it. He built things, and he never got away from it. I’ve found, that has taken root in me.

My father talked about my grandfather who loaded trucks and laid bricks, that was what they did and what defined them. So the idea of working with your hands — my hands — came as second nature to me.

I hope that people will never lose the wonder that comes with gadgetry contraptions.

Continue reading…

50s posters found at Notting Hill Gate Station

Thanks to Huxley for this great share

“Work at the old Notting Hill station has recently uncovered these amazing advertising posters in non-public areas that date from c1956 – 1959 when the station’s lifts were removed and replaced by escalators. These are in an old lift passageway.

A variety of posters can be seen – some are London Transport’s own posters such as the ‘elephant’ by Victor Galbraith – but others include the Royal Blue sailor by Daphne Paddern.

They will be leaving these intact – and please do not pester the station staff as the posters are wholly inaccessible – which is why they’ve probably survived 50 odd years! Pretty cool I think you will agree.”

Alex Varanese: Alt/1977

3769cb166417be68a320697c7fb0e58d.png ba2dddbbd38793d2dd0240a6af276658.png86c04e820bead21be2d6d78aea78101d.png 1c61be2bac12d391429a9b9d8e81233f.png

Artist Alex Varanese is a genius. No question. Check out his project ALT/1977

What would you do if you could travel back in time? Assassinate Marilyn Monroe? Go on a date with Hitler? Obviously. But here’s what I’d do after that: grab all the modern technology I could find, take it to the late 70’s, superficially redesign it all to blend in, start a consumer electronics company to unleash it upon the world, then sit back as I rake in billions, trillions, or even millions of dollars.

This post was published at JoshSpear.com.



Copyright © 2008–2012. All rights reserved.

This blog is proudly powered by Wordpress and uses a highly-customised version of Modern Clix, a theme by Rodrigo Galindez.