Études Studio on Crossing Creative Lines: Fashion, publishing, a creative agency and a new pop-up are all in a day’s work for this hybrid collective

Études Studio on Crossing Creative Lines


Crossing lines and breaking boundaries is nothing new in the creative community—in fact, it’s largely what the industry is built upon. Communications designers become brand engineers, painters design textiles and ceramicists dabble in industrial engineering. However, few…

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Interview: Michelle Dunn Marsh of Minor Matters: The art book publisher approaches the industry with a new and intelligent angle

Interview: Michelle Dunn Marsh of Minor Matters


Evolving technologies have required the publishing industry to become a business of creative thinking. So, in her new publishing venture called Minor Matters, Michelle Dunn Marsh takes a page from Kickstarter…

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Open Book: Christian Patterson + Paul Schiek: The pair talks about publishing and why print isn’t dead, ahead of the New York Art Book Fair

Open Book: Christian Patterson + Paul Schiek


In our third and final installment of interviews surrounding art book publishing, which leads into the New York Art Book Fair this weekend, we talked to Christian Patterson—the artist…

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Open Book: John Jenkins of DECODE: The second installment in our series of interviews with small publishers delves into the changing landscape of print media

Open Book: John Jenkins of DECODE


In the second installment of our series of interviews with small art book publishers leading up to the New York Art Book Fair running from 20-22 September, CH chatted with John Jenkins of Seattle-based Continue Reading…

Open Book: Taj Forer of Daylight Books: We interview the co-founder and editor for the first of our three-part series on small publishers ahead of the NY Art Book Fair

Open Book: Taj Forer of Daylight Books


Like so many businesses today, the publishing industry is facing new challenges due to rapidly changing technologies. With the New York Art Book Fair taking place on 20-22 September, we chatted with three art book publishers…

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Interview: Sam Arthur of Nobrow and Flying Eye Books: This London publisher rejuvenates the children’s book market with a collection of beautifully illustrated stories

Interview: Sam Arthur of Nobrow and Flying Eye Books


by Gavin Lucas Independent publisher Nobrow has built a solid reputation since its inception in 2008 as a purveyor of beautifully produced image-based books. Now, from its headquarters in a shopfront studio in London’s Shoreditch, it…

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Blurb at Clerkenwell Design Week

In the second movie in our series we filmed at pop-up stores during Clerkenwell Design Week, UK director of self-publishing platform Blurb Teresa Pereira talks about how designers are bypassing traditional publishing houses and using the internet to create, publish and sell their own books.

She explains how publishing on demand from the internet provides designers with the tools to produce books quickly and cost effectively compared to traditional publishing.

Watch Theo founder Thorsten van Elten discuss how the internet is changing design retail here and see all our stories about Clerkenwell Design Week here.

The post Blurb at
Clerkenwell Design Week
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Onion’s Great Escape

The story of one vegetable’s survival in an interactive children’s book

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As a cross between illustration, philosophy and paper engineering, Sara Fanelli‘s most recent children’s book “The Onion’s Great Escape” challenges the limitations of reading as an interactive experience. Following the quest of an onion as it attempts to escape its apparent fate of death by frying, the book’s perforated core is removed page-by-page until, at the end, the onion is literally freed from the book. The innovative fusion of tactile activity and illustration is taken a step further by a call-and-response method of asking children difficult questions with room for a written answer.

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Throughout the die-cut, 68-page work, questions range from the categorical “What is your name?” to the metaphysical “What is the longest minute you can remember?” Rather than dumbing down the experience, each page challenges young minds to come up with a creative response. Fanelli’s illustrations show an impressive range, and she is able to freeze moments of delight and despair as the onion flies through obstacles on its journey to save himself.

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Each page of “The Onion’s Great Escape” offers a new look and experience, and the diversity of styles is enhanced by the perforated core, which can be mixed and matched with different pages in the book. As the onion gradually breaks free from the pages, it emerges to stand alone as a 3D entity—the remainder of the book’s content staying intact.

“The Onion’s Great Escape” is available for pre-order from Phaidon and on Amazon. See more images of the book in our slideshow and check out this video of the book in action.

Images by James Thorne


Fubiz Curioos Collection

En collaboration avec Curioos, voici la première collection d’oeuvres et de visuels prints Fubiz en édition limitée. Des impressions artistiques avec agrandissements et cadres : l’ensemble de cette sélection est disponible sur la boutique et dans la galerie présente ci-dessous.



axel_morin-caricature

davidcarmina_zebralicious

jeff_rogers-nyc

jan_kriwol-paperrealities

emeric_takeshi_trahand-asuspendedhorse

darion_mccoy-melissa

wanchana_intrasombat_vic-thai_spirit_in_paradise

vladimir_shelest-dreamsrocks

tony_kuchar-mt

seb_niark1-beastiole_on_wheels

ramona_ring-grey_hounds

rafael_pereira-awaf

philippe_intraligi-neozoom

michael_zagorski-valence_the_black_remains

matt_lyon-sunset_mount

mathiole-building_a_galaxy

maicon_mcn-gameboy_poster

lukas_brezak-prisoner_of_the_rising_sun

levi_jacobs-fatkid

joe_murtagh-business1

djorgensen_cyclo

dave_razor_compton_wolff-fleetingsummer

klaus_fleischhacker-nostalgia

atelier_olschinsky-plant

anthonygargasz_villain

andrey_flakonkishochki-bird

alvaro_tapia_hidalgo-anatomy

alessandro_pautasso-john

craniodsgn-faces





































Previously on Fubiz

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Charlie Melcher

From Madonna to Al Gore, how one publisher reimagines books for the digital age
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Charlie Melcher is, in his own words, a man of eclectic tastes. With a hand in some of pop culture’s most influential phenomena, from “South Park: A Sticky Forms Adventure” to Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth,” Melcher has been redefining the publishing industry since graduating from Yale University in 1988. Conceptualizing projects like Madonna’s controversial “Sex” book is practically old hat to Melcher, who spearheaded the tome when he was with Calloway Editions. The progressive publisher explains the choice was obvious, “Madonna was going to get naked in an amazing book of erotica. What was not to like?”

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Melcher worked his way up the ranks after college, re-launching what he’d called Melcher Press as Melcher Media in ’94, where he patented the technology behind DuraBooks. Waterproof, synthetic paper made of nontoxic resins and inorganic materials instead of wood pulp, the infinitely recyclable pages make for ideal beach reads or field guides. The technology also came into play for William McDonough and Michael Braungart’s environmentalist design manifesto,
“Cradle to Cradle.” Like Melcher, the game-changing book preaches a new kind of industrial sustainability—one that incorporates eco-consciousness from the ground up.

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From the ground up is exactly how Melcher Media approaches all of its projects,
shepherding a new publication from its inception through various print and digital
incarnations. Working on “An Inconvenient Truth,” Melcher took Al Gore’s next project one step further, developing iPhone and iPad apps called “Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis.” The richly-colored pages, filled with interactive infographics, animations, maps and documentary footage, are all accessible with a swipe of a finger.

“For the last 20 years, I’ve labored to break out of the confines of the two-
dimensional Flatland of the printed page and redefine books as multi-sensory
interactive experiences,” Melcher said. The phrase that he uses, “deep
marketing,” is a type of marketing that creates a unique, immersive experience that
a reader will seek out on his own, which can range from reading a DuraBook in a
bubble bath to flipping through maps of Africa on the iPad while on the train to work.

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If working on Gore’s books wasn’t enough of an indication, Melcher also exercises his strong interest in sustainability with his position on the advisory committee for Green Press Initiative and FSC certification for Melcher Media. Clients like HBO and MTV may seem off-brand, but Melcher insists, “The projects that we do are all things that I, or my staff, are personally passionate about. We love high culture and low culture. If it is [a book on] a serious subject, we try to find approaches that will make it as impactful and appealing to as large an audience as possible, and if it’s a pop culture project we try to find the angles that will make the most high-quality and innovative version available.”

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As Melcher Media’s website points out, books have basically remained the same since the invention of the Gutenberg Press. If phones and other communication
devices have to keep updating themselves, there’s no reason why this venerable
technology should have to stay the same. “Pop-up books for adults, books with
sound chips and 3-D glasses and now interactive media-rich apps are all examples of an effort to reinvent the book in the digital age.”

The Audi Icons series, inspired by the all-new Audi A7, showcases 16 leading figures united by their dedication to innovation and design.