The latest work for Honda by Wieden + Kennedy is an interactive online experience that takes its cues from the way Street View allows users to move and look around a 360 degree photographed environment. Only there’s no streets here…
I can’t actually get this working in my browser for some reason, so I’ll link to the creative review post instead which has a good deal of extra info. HERE.
Small Austrian design firm Atelier Olschinsky were commissioned to take editorial photographs in and around the Red Bull Ring for Nevertheless magazine.
See the rest of their shots here.
I’m not massively into cars, but the Road Inc. iPad app is the kind of thing that I find interesting - essentially designed as a handheld car museum.
The app has a collection of 50 vehicles - each of which have been fully recreated and modeled in 3D alongside archival photos, history, and soundbites to check out.
It’s a well designed package, and without an iPad I can only take a look at the videos. Grab the app at their site here.
CHEVROLET Viking truck (1960)
Graphic Designer Christian Annyas has put together a small retrospective of Chevrolet speedometer designs from the history of the car manufacturer.
There’s an amazing consistency amongst the designs until you hit the digital age. It’s a real shame I can’t find higher-res versions…
Enjoy the set here.
Christopher Hall has a real eye for framing and documenting what most would consider mundane, everyday, or forgotten.
He recently put out a book titled ‘Home is Where the Car Is’ and I’m a massive sucker for American vintage cars.
See his Flickr
Follow his Tumblr
Graphic Design peer and pal Ryan Bartaby sits opposite me in the studio. He often can’t decide if he wants to be a graphic desginer or a photographer…
His rather nice photos make it apparent why.