Posts Tagged ‘ideas about Flickr’

Persepolis 2.0 responds to the Iran election in graphic novel form

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

Remember Persepolis, the graphic novel about growing up in Iran in the 70s and 80s? (I just re-read it in my FourLoko fueled book club.) Two Iranians appropriated artist Marjane Satrapi’s style for an online graphic novel about the recent Iran elections at spreadpersepolis.com.

(I nabbed the source code off their site to embed this below, you can also view it in full screen on Flickr here)

I’m not sure how I feel about this fan art. On the one hand, her stark, black ink dominated panels are associated with Iran for many people after the success of her novels (Persepolis, Persepolis 2, Embroderies) and film (called Persepolis and covering the content of 1 and 2). And it worked for attention, getting Boing Boing coverage.

But they used her characters, which are her family and herself as a child, to portray a modern story that is directly related to her own work. She’s still living in Paris and producing, so it seems a bit like beating her to the punch. My searches didn’t turn up any response from her.

I made this at work. Sneak peek on an eco scavenger hunt.

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

scavenger-hunt

Ok, so the image is not the snazziest thing you’ve ever seen, but I don’t even have Photoshop on this computer at work, so I made this with a program called Pixelmator, which is free and has all the basic gadgets and gizmos as Photoshop.

For our July newsletter I wanted to create fun, original content, because we’ve really been lacking in that lately. I’ve been so busy with the research and writing of the 2010 books (6! Portland, Seattle, Twin Cities, Berkeley/Oakland…and new this year Silicon Valley and Denver!) that I’ve had little time to write and create new pieces. It was high time for some original editorial content. (more…)

Flickr group for sketchbooks: Pretty Sketchy

Friday, May 8th, 2009

sketch me out

One page each of sketchbooks from group members. Makes me want to go home and draw. Pretty Sketchy. From this post, via swissmiss.

Malaysian epic wedding adventures on Flickr

Friday, May 8th, 2009

wedding for a princessI stumbled across this amazing Flickr stream, Sapex, by a wedding photographer in…Malaysia. I think. Kuala Lumpur Hilton comes up in one of the photos. Frankly I can’t figure out if my computer isn’t rendering the font or if this, on his blog, is the language. Knowing nothing about Malaysia, I looked it up, and it seems very cool. FYI the people are called Malays, and they’re mostly Islamic, though the country is a mix of cultures and religions, especially in Kuala Lumpur.

By the looks of it, they throw amazing weddings with fantastic party favors. All photos: Sapex. Each photo is linked so you can check out the rest of the party. I love Flickr!

pom pom? (more…)

Flickr as the internet’s Exquisite Corpse. SXSW Interactive in Sketchnotes.

Monday, March 30th, 2009

may our information be handwritten

SWSW Interactive 2009, in Sketchnotes on Flickr. The blog is here.

Flickr is one of the most underutilized web 2.0 sites out there. While right now it’s mostly limited to photos, I see it really taking off with written, detailed information like this. Beyond images, it allows for visually interesting ways of relaying information in text. This is bound to be used by marketing soon, but on the creative side what I’m really hoping for is narrative.

Evolving news stories could be told in the form of Flickr sets with images on some slides, notes on the next. Creative stories could be told collectively, with image pools serving as a common source. From there I’d like to see people use image and text from Flickr to create and pass projects, like in an exquisite corpse.

Tags are almost a form of communal storytelling, a way of linking individual information between events and people. But they’re limited by their greatest strength, being user created. There’s too many variations, too many mispellings, to find and follow threads of information between sources. But limiting users to a set number of tags could limit conversation to those topics. What do to?