Among the design professions, graphic design is an embarrassingly
low-risk enterprise. Our colleagues in architecture, industrial
design, and fashion design are tormented by nightmares of
smoldering rubble, brutally hacked-off fingers, and embarrassing
wardrobe malfunctions. We graphic designers flirt with ...
paper cuts. Thus liberated from serious threats, we invent our
own: skating on the edge of illegibility, daring readers to navigate
indecipherable layouts … Our daredevil ambitions are never
so roused as when we’re our own audience.
— from a Design Observer thread
Blogging is a funny, tenuous thing. Borrowing equally from message
boards, diaries, note-passing in class, and vanity presses, blogging as a
form is bounded only by the size of thoughts. Imagine a blog as a tactile
thing, and you’d have only a ribbon of words, fringed with comments,
that slips across its own site while simultaneously, almost transgressively,
broadcasting through RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feeds to many
readers at once. As a reader, you pick up that thread in a million possible
ways: by visiting the blog itself, through quick links on other blog sites, as
a subscriber to that blog through an RSS aggregation tool, or via a Google
search. Quicksilver and insubstantial, blogging exists outside of time in
the way all sure-fire time sucks do. It’s a marvelous, addicting, occasionally
junk-strewn thing to do.
From politicos to bored stay-at-home moms, now to graphic designers,
the blog-bug has bitten deeply. As a communication tool, blogs embody
that ambiguous urgency of a voice hollering in a parking lot. Is the sky
really falling? Is that the shock of full-throated truth? Or has someone
just smashed a toe with a grocery cart and gotten bloody loud about it?
And what happens when all of us open up with our own yodels? I spoke
with the creators of the leading graphic design blogs to get a taste of unbounded
freedom, the future of the form, and the surprising revelations
of thinking out loud.
Be a Design Group is an invitation to all people to participate in design. It is a place where designers can test new ideas, share observations, and comment on cultural trends. Their definition of design is intentionally broad so that the subject matter of all posts can be diverse and unlimited.