A visual window into the minds of the most exciting type designers working today and, in turn, the intricate science of typography itself
For 40 years, the company responsible for the Eames chair and creating the office cubicle has been enhancing the learning experience
From the Great American Owls to the Great World Eagles, or what a sixty-something retired dishwasher can teach the rest of us about art
Note how much both the technology and the animation technique have improved between 2009, when the first trailer was made, and 2011
Historian Joan Saab discusses how clever activists used masterpieces by artists like Michelangelo and Andy Warhol for advocacy
Though none of it is overtly sexual, plenty of innuendo and carefully placed tree branches ensure your imagination stays on the frisky side
Since LEGO's creation in the 1940s, more than four billion minifigs have been manufactured -- or more than one for every two people on Earth
From the magnetic monopole to quasicrystals to dark matter, Pickover's 'The Physics Book' is an invaluable treasure trove of curated knowledge
From Gita Wolf, this book was silk-screened on rough recycled brown craft paper by hand in Tara Books' fair-trade workshop in Chennai
From 'Bunny Lake Is Missing' to 'It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World,' supercutting the visual legacy of the greatest graphic designer of all time
Continuing the season of food-related releases, Rothman -- of 'The Exquisite Book' and Drawn In' fame -- gives us this charming title
This American debut from the Korean illustrator tells the poetic, quiet story of creatures going to rest with simple, beautifully textured drawings
In 'PANTONE: The 20th Century in Color,' scholars Leatrice Eiseman and Keith Recker explore 100 years of the evolution of color's sociocultural footprint through art, ads, more
This six-minute sequence combining animation with live dancers was inspired by Freud's work on the unconscious mind and double meaning
You're never too old to make your mind agile, flexible, self-aware, and able to see patterns and connections that more rigid minds miss
What Richard Dawkins has to do with Hindu deities, from evil stepmothers to Edward Gorey, and a posthumous work from Shel Silverstein
In the summer of 1984, Sheridan College's Jon Minnis set out to complete an ambitious project, armed with only PANTONE markets and paper
With rare archival images from 1800 to 1980, David L. Chapman and Patricia Vertinsky take us on an exploration of early gender identity
This glassy waterfront retreat sits on a half-acre island off the coast of Sitka, Alaska, connected to the mainland by a 150-foot steel bridge
The MacArthur Fellow and Newberry Medal winner wrote dozens of kid's books with his own children in mind -- but now they've left the nest