Tag Archive | "retro"

Best Vintage Selections from the Duke Collection

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Best Vintage Selections from the Duke Collection


There are an absolute ton of online archives and digitized university collections online, from the NY Public Library to just about every university you can name. One of my favorites has been the Duke collection, which houses a manageable amount of stuff while spreading its holdings across an interesting range of categories. Sure, historical insight is always interesting, but what I’m really after are some nice, big JPEGs that really let you explore old design up-close. Part of it could be some kind of image-hoarding complex, with the idea that one day I’ll start making one-off t-shirts for myself, with all the best images I’ve found online (unlikely), but probalby it’s just because this stuff is plain rich, and speaks volumes if you give it some time and thought.

Finding a smaller university collection like Duke’s can be a goldmine for inspiration or just good old interesting stuff to see, so let’s take a look at some favorite selections.

Songbook: I’m Going Back to California

Here’s one of my favorites: American Sheet Music from the 1850s right up to the 1920s. If you want to see a concise history of American illustration (or a little history of illustrated racism), look here. Not only do you get overwhelmed with lots of old-time song titles and obscure music hall singers long since forgotten, but the art continuously attempted to match the subject matter in a myraid of interesting ways. Endlessly worthwhile.

KLM Airlines Ad, 1953

There are over 800 transportation related ads in the Duke holdings, and there’s something about seeing how the American public viewed (or was sold) the experience of travelling to Europe in the 1940s that’s endlessly evocative to me. This idea of getting on a bouncy plane and heading across the ocean to find a Spain or Italy where English was surely non-existent and American money was still worth a lot more than the local currency is fascinating, especially when beheld through the lens of advertising.

Now You’ll Like Yeast!

Another fantastic thing about old collections is the text used in promoting the products, especially medical ones. Here’s one from Duke’s “Medicine and Madison Avenue” series. Remember that Simpsons episode where Grandpa tried to figure out what was wrong with Maggie and pulled out “Dr. Washburn’s” medical book, naming off such old-timey ailments as scofula, the ‘vapors’, jugnle rot, dandy fever, poor man’s gout, the staggers, and dum-dum feveer? If you enjoyed that in any way, old medical ads can hold your interest for about 6 straight hours.

Kellogg’s Corn Flakes Ad, 1915

This classic Kellogg’s advertising card is taken from Duke’s wonderful collection of advertising “ephemera“, made up of cards and inserts and hundreds of other little unmissable things that came along with standard advertising, from 1850-1920. An fount of styles and inspiration.

Photo from “The Urban Landscape”

Here’s an unidentified photo from an otherwise so/so “Urban Landscape” series I couldn’t help but include. I love it because of the overblown vignetting that obscures everything but the monument, the flag (see the full view), and whatever the protagonists of the photo are looking at off to the left. I’d surely buy this if it was artfully converted to a vector graphic and screen printed on a shirt.

Within these categories you can find some of the best old advertising, design, and illustration around. Whether you’re writing copy for an “old-fashioned” ad campaign, trying to get a retro look for a client, or simply interested in some vintage American advertising and photography, you’ll stumble upon something useful in the collection.

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Wonderful Vintage Computers

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Wonderful Vintage Computers


Vintage Computers

I wile away a sizable amount of my time searching for things that fall under the rubric of “vintage design”. And while I find an awful lot online, the fact remains that when it comes to getting inspired or just enjoying the art itself, print culture wins every time. A one-hour visit to the archives of my old Belgian university library often gave me more than a whole month of surfing ever did.

Much of this comes from the physical allure that design books hold–what’s more inspiring to a dilettante: finding a heaving shelf of foreign movie poster books, or surfing the dismally commercial sites online, sifting through an unsatisfying array of sub-40k JPEGs? Not only is the editorial touch lost, but the tangible nature and the sheer weight of most design books make the print culture all the more appealing.

While a flickr pool full of vintage buttons, magazine scans, or movie posters is endlessly rich and interesting, even the most carefully monitored can balloon out of control, filling our browsers with 2,001 different selections just because they’re available. The chances of finding a carefully controlled, perfect group of design that covers an area you want–with high-quality jpegs of each image, too–is next to impossible. Sure, they’re out there, but the investment of surfing time isn’t usually worth the return.

One $20 book on 60s advertising provides me with more subjective enrichment than any set of afternoons trolling flickr. However, if there is one area that’s hard to find in print (and quite a few remain), it’s vintage computer design. At first, I thought it might have something to do with the designs themselves–a function before form kind of thing–but surely the historical spectrum of interesting computer models is wide enough to merit more than 3 lonely books, none of them truly comprehensive?

After all, if a big design publisher like Taschen can publish a book on apartments called Brussels Style (really a fine little book, just very specific to one, smaller city, and not in the art-nouveau way you might be thinking), they could easily do one on vintage computers, or vintage electronics at the very least, and find a sizable audience. And yet they haven’t.

For now, the majority of vintage computer design tends to be surveyed through the lens of advertising, but I often find myself far more interested in the objects themselves. Since advertising gives us a visual history of both product and graphic design, and serves as a reliable indicator of the commercial zeitgeist, most “vintage” searches inevitably end with a piece of scanned publicity. And while we all love staring at advertising, there are times we need something more specific–clean, big, minimal-context photos–maybe even chosen by a real editor with an eye for design.

And so we’re left with the few books out there that fit the bill, and then the wide, unorganized Internet. With this disparity in mind, here’s a selection of books and sites on vintage computers that rise above cursory nostalgia and reach the level of inspiration.

Mark Richards’ Core Memory

Core Memory

Nothing can be said about vintage computers without mentioning this absolute marvel of a book, released in 2007. Without question, some of the most gratifying images of vintage technology (of any kind) I’ve ever seen. Richards has an eye for framing & lighting that makes a rack-mounted server look like a forgotten masterpiece. For inspiration and sheer enjoyment, this book is finer than anything you’ll find online.

Gordon Lang’s Digital Retro

Digital Retro

Lovingly profiles 40 computers from the late 70s to the early 90s, backed up with big, new photographs and some solid layout.

Marcin Wichary’s Computer History Museum Photographs

Computer History Museum

Far better than anything you’ll find on the museum’s official site, a beautiful set of vintage computer parts from a prolific flickr photographer with a keen eye. He’s got some fantastic stuff from other computer museums around the world, too.

Mark Frauenfelder’s The Computer: An Illustrated History

A History

Although I have yet to see this book in person, and it’s not searchable on Amazon, it comes from boingboing writer Mark Frauenfelder, and repeated mentions of its “coffee-table appeal” suggest a high quota of worthwhile imagery within.

Dan McPharlin’s Miniature Models

Dan McPharlin

A beautiful cardboard computer model done for Esquire magazine. This guy knows what he’s doing when it comes to uniquely capturing the appeal of vintage electronics. Most of his previous model work (also posted on his flickr account) is made up of fantastic renderings of analog synthesizers.

C64 – A flickr set by *ade

Commodore 64

This is the kind of link I just like to have on hand: 9 macro shots of a Commodore 64 that highlight some of its best aesthetic features up-close.

While we’ve got the major books covered, I know we’ve only scratched the surface when it comes to vintage computers online. If you know of a particularly good, design-centered resource, share it with us in the comments!

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Top 5 Classic NES-Inspired Designs

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Top 5 Classic NES-Inspired Designs


nespad1
For those who grew up playing videogames in the time of Nintendo’s famed NES (pop demographics would call you the Net Generation, from 74-83), any evocation of that oh-so-recognizable graphic style and its surrounding aesthetic exerts a strong pull.

Some nights I find myself mindlessly, obsessively hoarding JPEGs of 85/86-era NES box art, searching for that perfect nostalgia that comes from seeing the star-scened, pixellated cover with the strange, smeared trailing lines. Why save these little pieces of ephemera? It’s not that hard to explain–sometimes it reminds me of a specific moment from childhood, be it a trip half-squandered with my head in a glossy Nintendo catalogue, or a guy at the local game shop showing me an imported NES and Super Mario Bros. III many months (!) before it arrived in North America.

As such, the aesthetics of NES design left a huge stamp on my childhood, and influenced much of the way I see design today–in the same way that 8-bit gaming has for thousands. And along with my generation’s purchasing power comes a series of wonderfully nostalgia-savvy products that continue to vie for some of our cash. While Nintendo proper stays busy working on how to make exponential amounts of money on products they finished 15+ years ago (see the Nintendo Wii’s virtual console), the world of un/licensed NES-inspired design continues on. With that, let’s run through our top 5 NES-inspired designs that hit that sweet spot of nostalgia without fail.

5. Banpresto’s Super Mario Bros. Dioramas

Banpresto's Super Mario Bros. Dioramas

These evoke the same memories that a cherished vacation photo can. We stare at it every once in a while, remembering the location, the kind of person we were at the time, the people we were with, the turtle we jumped on 144 times to increase our life count… everything. Besides, in each diorama Mario is controlled by a small magnet at the back, further enabling the detached-yet-tangible reenactments of the game that inevitably follow picking this thing up. Sadly, no longer made.

4. Banpresto’s Nintendo Bath Towels

NES Bath Towel

These are more than slightly ridiculous, and yet if I saw one in a store I’d buy it immediately. Mostly out of print, if there’s such thing as a bath towel being out of print.

3. Cole Ranze’s Nintendo All-Stars

Converse Nintendo Allstars

While not strictly NES-inspired, they’re sort of amazing, and the design’s theme just fits so damn perfectly with the name of the shoe.

2. The NESBuckle

Something about the fact that these are done with actual controllers–meaning there’s a finite number of them to be constructed–makes my brain need one a little more. NESBuckle also does other game-controller buckles, but even a cursory glance at the competitors shows that only one can give you the perfectly squared dimensions and still-wonderful black/gray/red colour scheme your nostalgia yearns for.

1. Beatboxtaun’s Ridiculously Nice Punch-Out! Scarves

Punch-Out! Scarves

A perfect mix of hand-made design and NES nostalgia. There are times when pixel art, with its little perfect quadrants and rigid aesthetic, translates magically to more “old fashioned” disciplines like sewing and cross-stitch. This is one, and here’s another spectacular example.

Have your own can’t miss piece of NES-inspired design we forgot? Let us know in the comments!

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