I’m working on a new title image for an upcoming event and was inspired to make the font gold.
Decided to try it out with more texture on an old favorite logo of mine (taken from a negative of a 1970s billboard):
I’ve been working on learning how to make a professional sepia print in Photoshop. My first attempt is from a photograph by Matt Addington.
You have to give yourself the space to say what you need to say, right, and not to say needless things.
This thought is weighing on my mind since I read it in the Chronicle yesterday morning. Needless things. What makes something needless? Or, vice versa, what constitutes need with regards to language? Is it needless to comment on the rain when you pass a stranger in the street or does that fulfill a social obligation by which we acknowledge their humanity and subsequent worth and relation to ourselves? To take another example, if we comment on a banal post about the weather online, are we legitimizing and substantiating the banal as something needful since it establishes a line of communication, or should our conversations be judged by their depth of feeling or understanding in the end?