A micro-documentary examines the jiggly, architectural creations of "jellymongers" Bompas & Parr
The most important typeface company of the '60s—maybe the most important ever—is born again online
Help Japan be reborn by visiting the Eastern Eggs website, picking a design, and letting the Egg Bot do the rest
A Twitter-sourced e-book raises money for earthquake relief without the consumerist pitfalls of posters and t-shirts
The perils of editing a design journal (and famous designers), and a hate/love relationship with a mid-century timepiece
David Friedman films the creative but ordinary inventors who brought us the digital camera, wheelchair brakes, and more
It might not seem possible, but these elaborate shoes from a Tel Aviv-based designer really are made to be worn
The Fairest Fowl: Portraits of Championship Chickens teaches us that "chickens this amazing don't just happen"
In this miniature documentary, a Copenhagen-based filmmaker explores one of the world's toughest questions
Three artists use the yellow, blue, and black New York City subway ticket to create collages and doodles of everything from Bruce Lee to the Statue of Liberty
A country's bid to leave behind stodgy Celtic imagery and get out of the shadow of England and Northern Europe
Futuristic mutants meet retro design in this fan-created movie trailer, which recalls the good old days of Saul Bass
Father-son duo Erik and Martin Demaine invent paper sculptures that bridge the gap between math and art
Saul Bass invented some of the most iconic film graphics of the 20th century—and DVDs have destroyed his work
Stylish mirrors, planters, the Stockholm lamp, and a customizable snowflake textile that you can use for almost anything
The indie crafts movement meets mainstream publishing in these colorful, high-thread-count book jackets
An Israeli artist combines social commentary with an acute awareness of the visual power of emptiness
A new book blends the edginess of graffiti with the charm of interior decorating and introduces the art of the stencil
What would Helvetica look like if it were a person? Maybe like one of the models on this Spanish design studio's posters.
A documentary featuring rock stars and music pioneers explains how a simple device made electric guitars talk