An incomplete record of things designed, made, observed, read, rejected, appreciated, or created.

Red Hat’s flagship product, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, turned 10 this week. To help celebrate, our video team (ok, mostly Brett Abramsky) put together a mini-doc that does a great job summing up what exactly Red Hat does—harnessing the power of community-built open source software and making it the stable, reliable platform that big companies (and the internet) rely on.

(Oh, and the sweet design at 0:45? I made that.)

I’ve been working with AIGA Raleigh on a brand and promotional materials for their new lunch-and-learn series, Homegrown. The series aims to highlight local experts and help designers build skills not generally considered part of traditional graphic design practice. Between the getting to build a little brand from scratch, buying awesome  new type, and building kaleidoscope-style patterns out of doodles, this  is my favorite project in a while.
The first batch is live today, featuring fellow Red Hat brand team member Mike Esser, who will be sharing his video expertise next month. You can learn more and register for the event here.

I’ve been working with AIGA Raleigh on a brand and promotional materials for their new lunch-and-learn series, Homegrown. The series aims to highlight local experts and help designers build skills not generally considered part of traditional graphic design practice. Between the getting to build a little brand from scratch, buying awesome new type, and building kaleidoscope-style patterns out of doodles, this is my favorite project in a while.

The first batch is live today, featuring fellow Red Hat brand team member Mike Esser, who will be sharing his video expertise next month. You can learn more and register for the event here.

Open Source For America is an organization that works to raise awareness of open source in the federal government.

A couple of years ago, Tim Kiernan and I worked on a video to help OSFA promote their mission. Type and layout by me, motion and film by Tim. Logo courtesy of an over-zealous web designer who, in the wake of Obama’s election, couldn’t keep his gradients off this logo, which was a collaboration between me and Critter.

(Source: youtube.com)