Megan Wilson and her Ancient Industries

A handful of Megan Wilson‘s work has just been added to the Archive. Her covers have a timelessness rarely seen in today’s market.

Unsurprisingly, she also runs an incredibly cool pseudo-antiques shop, Ancient Industries, which specializes in “traditional household goods and clothing.”



February 14th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   1 Comment »

And… we’re back.
With some slight stylistic changes to boot.

February 11th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   1 Comment »

oops

This is what I get for updating wordpress.
I’ll have the blog fixed in a bit, hopefully.

February 11th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   No Comments »

Pinch: A design office.

Pinch, a design studio working out of Portland, OR, does everything from corporate websites to festival brochures, treating it all with a combination of unmistakeably northwestern sensibilities and exquisite grids.

I’ve just finished adding a handful of their covers for Hawthorne Books to the Archive. They are remarkably consistent in their branding, without being overly systemized. You can, and should, read up on the full case study at their site.

View their Archive page here.

February 11th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   No Comments »

Czech book covers of the 20s and 30s

bca_czech_2

bca_czech_1

The full collection
Found via Eric Baker’s Today

February 10th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   No Comments »

New Kindle doubles as time machine… Launches 15 years ago.

Seriously though, what’s with the photography?
(In other news, the Kindle II is go)

I’d also like to note that I’m currently reading Dan Simmon’s latest book, Drood, which comes in at just under 3lbs and over 800 pages. So if anyone felt like donating a Kindle to the cause, I wouldn’t hold it against you.

February 9th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   1 Comment »

you got kindle in my peanut butter

This is unexpected: It appears that Kindle is going to be a platform after all.

Amazon said that it was working on making the titles for its popular e-book reader, the Kindle, available on a variety of mobile phones. The company, which is expected to unveil a new version of the Kindle next week, did not say when Kindle titles would be available on mobile phones.

“We are excited to make Kindle books available on a range of mobile phones,” said Drew Herdener, a spokesman for Amazon. “We are working on that now.”

This is great news for e-books. The potential of the Kindle lies not in their device (which imho is still missing the mark), but Amazon’s ability to rally publishers behind a unified standard for distribution, and their leverage to force reasonable prices.

(sorry, I’ll try to make this the last e-book post for a while)

February 6th, 2009 by Eric Jacobsen   |   4 Comments »

February 4th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   2 Comments »

The revolution will be analyzed

The Casual Optimist has a serious breakdown of the state of the eBook industry. Great article for getting your head around what the big boys are offering, what’s coming up, and what challenges lay ahead.

“It actually takes a great deal of time and expertise — often in short supply at small presses — to put a digital program in place. And although the cost of creating, marketing, and selling e-books may be low once the infrastructure is there, getting to that point requires a lot investment.

February 3rd, 2009 by Pieratt   |   1 Comment »

Also on the topic of e-books: it turns out that John Siracusa of Ars Technica (my favorite blog for news of Internet and all things IT-related) was a web developer for Peanut Press, the firm that took the best, earliest shot at creating an e-book market. Siracusa has written a comprehensive look at the past, present and future of e-books. On the topic of “e-book inevitability”:

All of the arguments about screen quality and medium/content separation crumble to dust in the face of these inconvenient truths: broadly speaking, people aren’t buying e-books; people don’t want e-books; people do not want to read book-length texts off of a screen. Or, to paraphrase a long-forgotten but nevertheless surprisingly applicable movie from the 90s, people love their books.

But the truth is, these things always turn out the same way. And I have some bad news for the bibliophiles. The beloved, less technically sophisticated information conveyance with the pedigreed history doesn’t win. To put it bluntly, people die.

Ars Technica is notable for combining an alpha-nerd understanding of technology with special attention to human factors and lay-person’s language; they’ve published articles on the intricacies of microprocessor architecture that my grandma could grok. This is required reading.

February 3rd, 2009 by Eric Jacobsen   |   No Comments »

1000 Covers (!)

1000 Covers

Three things worth noting this evening:

1) We just finished uploading our 1000th cover. Woo!

2) The entirety of the Pocket Penguins 70th Anniversary box set is now up for display. They’re currently on the front page or you can see them in the Penguin Books Ltd publisher page.

3) Stephen Coles has been hard at work identifying the fonts used on all the covers in the Archive. He is just shy of 200 covers identified at this point. Check out the Futura and Trade Gothic pages for a preview of things to come.

February 3rd, 2009 by Pieratt   |   3 Comments »

*Every* issue of McSweeney’s

Possibly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity: Seattle’s The Stranger is auctioning a set of every issue of McSweeney’s Quarterly to date, including a copy of extremely rare first issue autographed by David Eggers. Holy Mackerel!

mcsweeneys

Proceeds from the auction go to Treehouse, a charity that provides clothing, tutoring and school supplies for foster children.

February 1st, 2009 by Eric Jacobsen   |   1 Comment »

Book cover design goes digital (sorry)



January 30th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   2 Comments »

This is not a book cover..

..but it should be.
Thomas Bradley does good work.

January 28th, 2009 by Pieratt   |   4 Comments »

imagine, more precious coffee and oxygen for the rest of your staff

Amazon is courting newspaper publishers who are facing staff layoffs with the suggestion that they replace book review columnists with free critics from Amazon.

Here’s an idea: complete the circuit by replacing authors with novel-generating software algorithms, and ask your buddies at Google to develop some bots to read the damned things.

January 28th, 2009 by Eric Jacobsen   |   No Comments »