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Our August issue is about movement: the movement of cities and airports, filmmakers and baseball players, museumgoers and revolutionaries. But above all, it’s about the way people move in step with design.
 
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Features 

Movement
A special section of Print, guest designed by SPIN
 
The carefully engineered pitching form of the San Francisco Giants ace is the epitome of good design.
by Angela Riechers
 
Revisiting Schiphol
Total Design’s former creative director on Benno Wissing and the airport that changed the world.
by Ben Bos  
 
Disappearing Information
Cartlidge Levene’s way-finding systems get us from A to B without so much as a whisper.
by Mark Sinclair
 
How the City Moves Us
In New York and Paris, the way we get around defines life. Plus: a preview of the book 100 Ideas for New York.
by James Biber
 
Documenting the visual legacy of Egypt’s popular revolt, from photocopied fliers to Coke ads.
by Ursula Lindsey
 
Hollywood’s Lost Title Designer
The man behind the titles of Bonnie and Clyde and a thousand other films and TV shows steps out from the shadows.
by Steven Brower
 
Moving Pictures
What’s the matter with Hollywood film posters?
by Adrian Shaughnessy
 
Up Front

Crit+Comments
We heard an earful from readers about last month’s “Surprise” issue, guest designed by Kokoro & Moi.
 
Grids+Guides
Design for curious minds: Irma Boom on authority, the Space Shuttle lands, the evolution of the milk carton, and two books that whet our appetite.
 

Print's August 2011 Issue

by Print staff
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Table of Contents


Departments
 
A new generation of designers is reviving the quintessential Polish art form.
 
Dialogue
Steven Heller finds out how the Norman Rockwell Museum is bringing the iconic American artist into the 21st century.
 
Observer
Does graphic design history have a future? Rick Poynor investigates.
 
Best Practices
Jeremy Lehrer asks Nike about building shoes with a green soul.
 
Paul Shaw and Stephen Coles talk Spiekermann and birthday cakes.
 
Education
Eileen MacAvery Kane thinks Shepard Fairey can teach designers a lesson in ethics.
 
Design Thinking
Design thinking is dead. So what’s next?
 
Christopher Butler wonders if we can contain the cloud.
 
In the back
 
Reviews
Books on the human form, psychedelic art, and malfunctioning Russian space heaters
 
Back Issue
Editor emeritus Martin Fox on Print’s September/October 1982 story on posters for faux Broadway shows.
 
We pick the best, palette-cleansing entries from our first ever Color in Design awards. See the winners.
 
The Goods
New albums by Eno and They Might Be Giants, luxurious editions from White’s Books, and Adobe tackles apps
 
Justin Sullivan on Harry Beck’s subway map
 
In the Studio
Dress Code lets its hair down.

 
 
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Pentagram celebrates their 40th anniversary in style with this charming video detailing the story of a boy born on the day Pentagram opened. Happy birthday!

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13 designers create a custom tote bag for their favorite charity. Featuring the work of: Atelier Télescopique, Büro Destruct, Christoph Niemann, Deanne Cheuk, Ed Fella, Geoff McFetridge, Hort, James Joyce, Laurent Fetis, Rick Valicenti, Si Scott, Spin, and Sawdust. Order one today!
 
Check Out Past Issues

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The Play issue, from NBA branding to Lego urbanism. On the cover: Symphonic Band—Univ. S. Illinois / 1965, by Paul Octavious, from the series “Grandpa’s Records.” Octavious says: “My Grandpa Jud used to play records for me all the time as a kid... Read More
 
 
 
 
June 2011
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