This amazing stop-motion film of Manhattan’s busy streets and stunning skyline was completed over one month by Josh Owens of Mindrelic Photography. It’s a gorgeous tribute to America’s greatest city.
This amazing stop-motion film of Manhattan’s busy streets and stunning skyline was completed over one month by Josh Owens of Mindrelic Photography. It’s a gorgeous tribute to America’s greatest city.
Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson’s new polychromatic installation on top of the Aarhus ARoS Art Museum offers a vivid, candy-colored 360° view of the city. Titled “your rainbow panorama” the viewing platform divides Denmark’s second city into intense color zones.
photos by Studio Olafur Eliasson
The 2011 London Map Fair, taking place in the historic surroundings of the Royal Geographical Society, is the most established and largest antiquarian map fair in Europe: over forty of the leading national and international specialist map dealers will be exhibiting on June 11th and 12th.

Visitors to the fair will discover a vast selection of original antique maps covering the whole world and printed between the 15th and 19th Centuries. Highlights include a map of the universe by seventeenth-century Venetian cartographer Coronelli, revealing the Nine Circles of Hell as described in Dante’s Divine Comedy, as well as a 19th Century curiosity map of Europe depicting each country in the form of a caricature: the United Kingdom figures as an old crone.

Other fine maps offered this year will include: an example of Ogilby’s innovative and incredibly detailed, 17th Century road map, marking all inns, churches and other landmarks on the road from London to Portsmouth – the course of the modern A3; an impression of Braun and Hogenberg’s bird’s-eye view of London; the earliest surviving printed plan of the city, dated 1574; and Christoph Vetter’s rare and beautiful 17th Century depiction of Bohemia stylised as a rose, with Prague at its centre and Vienna, the seat of the Hapsburg Dynasty, at its root.

Exhibitors will offer atlases, travel books, globes, sea charts, town plans, celestial maps, topographical prints and reference books; there are prices to suit all pockets ranging from a very affordable £10 to over £100,000 for exceptional pieces.
Established in 1980, this event is a must-visit in the collectors’ calendar – for map enthusiasts, dealers and curators alike. This year Laurence Worms and Ashley Baynton-Williams will launch their long-awaited Dictionary of British Map Engravers at the Fair. The product of over twenty years of research, it offers a wealth of fresh material on the map trade and a new insight into the lives of its most important figures, revealing some surprising links and relationships in the process.
HMS Flake 99, the world’s first amphibious ice cream truck, took its maiden voyage on the Thames in London this week. Captained by comedian David Mounfield, who won a contest for the post, the sea-going ice cream truck was commissioned by Cadbury in honor of National Ice Cream Week. The HMS Flake 99, which has a top speed of 5 knots, will be turning up on waterways and beaches throughout Britain this summer and it may even sail across the Channel to visit the Continent.
The Arctic Light from TSO Photography on Vimeo.
This wonderful film was taken between April 29th and May 10th this year in the Arctic on the Lofoten Archipelago of Norway. The original music was composed by Marika Takeuchi.
The “Arctic Light” phenomenon occurs each Spring about a month before the Summer Solstice.
Hat tip to Suzanne Labarre
Swiss artists Daniel Baumann and Sabina Lang transform sports fields, streets, buildings and public spaces into abstract paintings and sculptures on a grand scale throughout Europe. Pay them a visit.
This summer Schocken is releasing a wonderful series of Kafka reissues with cover design by Peter Mendelsund. The cover typography is an amalgam of Kafka’s own handwriting and a typeface called “Mister K” by Julia Sysmäläine of Berlin.
Hat-tip to Alan Bloom for this post:
British artist/illustrator Owen Gatley has created a series of fun city maps for the Spanish budget carrier Vueling’s in-flight magazine, Ling.
Travelers are using their smartphones and tablets more and more, both in the planning stages of the trip and on the road. But with all the information and apps out there, where do you begin?
Starting this month, Apple will be holding free travel workshops for iPhone and iPad users at stores nationwide. The tutorials – focusing on apps, products, and other tools – are divided into three sections to give the best tips for before, during, and after your trip. Learn how to load up on games and books to keep you busy in transit, what apps work best, and how to share photos and more once you return home.
Find your local store and workshop times by visiting apple.com/retail.