This TV ad for Bing implies vampires are fans Amnesiafish Jeremy’s photo contest winning lightning shot.
Nice one, Jeremy! You’re a big hit with the undead.
Digital Experience Director, San Francisco Bay Area
This TV ad for Bing implies vampires are fans Amnesiafish Jeremy’s photo contest winning lightning shot.
Nice one, Jeremy! You’re a big hit with the undead.
Jeremy’s winning photo is the face of Bing today. Congratulations, Mr Somers!
Check it out today only: www.bing.com
Read more about how it got here: http://amnesiablog.wordpress.com/2009/07/24/vote-for-jeremys-photo-in-the-bing-summer-travel-photo-contest/
UPDATE: He won!!! Watch for his photo on Bing on August 3rd. Nice one…
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Man of many talents, jack of all trades, our very own Captain Creative, Jeremy is in the running to win a Bing home page photo contest.
Help him get there by voting and see this amazing lightning shot grace the front of Bing.
http://apps.facebook.com/bing_photo_contest/top_photos?_fb_q=1
Do it now!!! :-)
The man who puts the Klein in Kleinmania (one of our senior designers at Amnesia Razorfish here) was interviewed by The Publics.
“Kerning is an interesting process because it can be very time consuming and it’s usually invisible, as in you only notice it when it’s bad … To my knowledge nobody has ever died from poor kerning.”
Read the interview: http://pblks.com/2009/07/the-worlds-smallest-mania/
Kleinmania on Tumblr: http://kleinmania.tumblr.com/
“Near the hard-working espresso machine at Ritual Coffee Roasters, a café in San Francisco, sits a stainless-steel box about the size of a desktop computer. This box, the Clover, produces a cup of coffee with a spectacle of streaming water, whirring motors and an ingenious inverse plunger. Zander Nosler, the industrial designer who invented the Clover nearly three years ago, seems to have done the impossible: attracted a cult following for a new coffee-making machine that is both slower and vastly more expensive than other machines and requires the undivided attention of a trained operator.”
From The Economist print edition. Read the full article…
Always good to hear an old friend is doing well. :-)