Lit Mapping NYC

Trendy New York-based eyeglass purveyor Warby Parker has created an entertaining literary map dedicated to the Upper East side neighborhood around its uptown showroom. From Ira Levin’s spooky Rosemary’s Baby (yes, it was a book first) to J.D. Salinger’s iconic The Catcher in the Rye the map offers bibliophiles a tour of Gotham-centric books. Plans are in place for literary maps of Warby Parker’s other NYC neighborhoods. Hopefully, they’ll do the same for their Boston and Philadelphia locations too.

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Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, Maps, USA, Writing | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Will You Make The Switch

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Last week’s news story about 14 year-old student Suvir Michandani’s plan to save the U.S. government $400 million per year by encouraging the switch to use of the Garamond font in official documents went viral. Now the ad agency Grey and the British office supply and stationery company Ryman have gone a step further with the launch of a free environmentally friendly, money saving font that will reduce ink consumption.

The eco-friendly typeface, designed by Monotype’s Dan Rhatigan, is called Ryman Eco. Made up of fine lines rather than the usual solid strokes, the font is supposed to use 30% less ink than popular fonts such as Time New Roman, Arial and Verdana.

You can download the Ryman Eco for free right here

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Keeping It Real

I like real books and I can not lie. And it appears that a majority of other readers do too. The infographic below, which is based on a poll by the UK-based Fatbrain book marketplace, explores the reasons why readers prefer traditional print books over digital versions.

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Voyage Peru

This lovely short video tour of Peru was directed by Rob Kolodny of the New York-based House of Nod creative production company. Wandering with a few friends, he created a warm, sweet peek at the colorful culture of Peru.

Posted in Film, South America, Tourism | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Paris 1900 – 2014

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The clever folk at the website Golem 13 have created a marvelous set of photomontages that marry images from vintage Paris postcards with the same contemporary scenes photographed last month. You can see the complete series of images here.

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all images © golem13

 

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Joyeux Anniversaire

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Today is the 125th anniversary of the official completion of the Eiffel Tower. On my first visit to Paris many years ago, I spent an entire morning taking dozens of photos in every direction from viewing platform (like the panorama above), but on subsequent visits, I was content to see it from ground level and avoid the crowds. I thought I knew a lot about the iconic edifice, but was surprised by this list of facts:

  1. The Eiffel Tower was built in a record breaking time of two years, two months, and five days, after a January 28, 1887 groundbreaking.
  2. Gustave Eiffel had it built specifically to celebrate the 1889 Exposition Universelle and 100th anniversary of the French Revolution.
  3. It hasn’t always been brown. It was temporarily painted yellow in 1889, and from 1954 to 1961, it was painted a reddish-browny color.
  4. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Eiffel Tower acted as a billboard—three of its sides held advertisements for Citroën automobiles. No other brand has ever used the monument as an advertising medium.

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5. For decades the locals hated it. In 1888 a group of Parisian artists, writers and  architects called “The Committee of Three Hundred” it “monstrous.”

  1. In 1925 the first public radio transmissions were broadcast from the tower.
  2. The French newspaper Le Figaro actually set up a printing press on the second floor of the Eiffel Tower during its first year.

8. The Eiffel Tower is 4 to 8 inches shorter during the winter months due to shrinkage.

9. With nearly 7 million visitors each year (75% foreign), it’s the most visited monument in the world that charges admission.

10. During construction, Gustave Eiffel engraved the names of 72 eminent French scientists and engineers on the tower. They were shortly painted over and not uncovered again until 1986.

 

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Suddenly I’m Craving Curry

 

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These delicious maps are the result of a collaboration involving New Zealand photographer Henry Hargreaves and graphic artists Sarit Melmed and Caitlin Levin. Each of the amazing creations is made with real food from the nations and continents.

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According to Hargreaves, “These maps show how food has traveled the globe – transforming and becoming a part of the cultural identity of that place. Who doesn’t know the saying ‘throw some shrimp on the barbie’ and not think of Australia? Who goes to France without eating bread and cheese? And who makes a Brazilian caipirinha without a fistful of limes?

“These maps are a playful representation of our interpretation of food from around the world, painstakingly created with real unadulterated food. This project speaks to the universality of how food unites people, brings us together and starts conversation – just as we hope these beautiful maps will do too.”

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Posted in Africa, Asia, Europe, Maps, South America, USA | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Happy Birthday Vincent

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Travel Is More Than Seeing Sights

To celebrate their 25th anniversary in the travel biz, Australia’s Intrepid Travel commissioned a moving film titled “Travel Is More Than The Seeing of Sights”. The wonderful little video was filmed over the course of 1 ½ years in 12 different countries by Minneapolis-based David Klein and Mirra Fine from The Perennial Plate.

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No papers, No problem

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Düsseldorf-based, Polish-born photographer Josef Schultz traveled throughout Europe for years documenting abandoned passport control points, border posts and military check points. In his resulting series “Übergang”, Schultz digitally manipulated the landscape by removing commercial signage and by subtly blurring the background to isolate the sites from their original context.

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Posted in Architecture, Europe, History, Photography | Tagged , , | 1 Comment