Follow-Ups


Trying to break the (bad) habit of posting at four in the morning. Wish me luck…;)

If you haven’t alredy, read yesterday’s entry first. Thanks.

1. The poster went down in flames today. One word: “groupthink.” Monica defended it well, I understand, but that’s the way it goes. They’re going to pick another photo and we’ll try again. (Will save the details for another time, heheh.)

2. Managed to get through the missive last night without mentioning Google. Foreword is the #1 response to a search for book design, with or without quotes. Ahead of Amazon! That’s seriously cool.

That’s also exactly why I’d love to spur more conversation. The description on Google, a community in the service of books and book design, is exactly the purpose. Yes, it’s about me. But it’s also about Todd, Chip, Joseph, J., Amanda, and so many others, past, present, and future. Us. A diverse “community,” in the best sense of the word.

3. I don’t feel the “arrogant American” thing was worded well. I absolutely do not care where you physically work from, what language you grew up speaking, what color you are, or how you live your life. I do care about the quality of your work a great deal, however. And I want to help make it better. Because I learn — we all learn — as part of that process.

No matter who you are or where you’re from, if you’re here, it’s for the same reason I am: to have a greater knowledge and understanding of book design.

When I said “quest for expertise,” I meant “collective quest.” By posting a comment that brings an idea to the table, we all benefit. Good design ideas can, thankfully, transcend cultures — someone, somewhere, will look at that idea, and it will lead to another.

For freelancers in a trade such as book design, the internet is the great equalizer. It no longer matters where you live, only that you know what you’re doing. But that doesn’t remove culture.

Foreword is American-centric because the posters and active commenters are mostly American. I’d love to broaden that — we’d all benefit. Bring something to the table, though. Don’t just ask how to do it. Get involved in how to do it. That’s why we’re all here. Let’s share those ideas.

4. Speaking of sharing, I welcome feedback and ideas for improving how this site actually functions. The redesign includes some improvement in code related to comment moderation and posting, but will mostly be a visual thing. I’m currently going around (and around) regarding “quickie” posts; whether I’d do enough “Hey, this is cool…” posts to justify a third column and the CSS tricks necessary to do that properly. Probably not. Site loading speed’s a consideration, too. Simple code with striking visuals (well, and good posts…;) works best for me.

Now is the best time to talk about it. What would you like to see next? Leave a comment.


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Posted by Giles, Thursday, January 19, 2006, at 10:46 PM.
Posted to Art | Book and design blogs | Book cover photography | Book design | Books | Books, design, art | Business | Design | Flickr | Freedoms and rights | Personal | Photography | Publishing | Site news | Whatever | Writing

Comments:

Well, I know that I’ve been working on a few things and would really like some feedback. This might be fun — I have three (and if it’s a productive weekend, four) different designs of the same book. I’m certainly willing to post them if y’all think it would be fun to critique them.

Joe , January 20, 2006 2:14 PM (#)

Please!! I would love to see them.

Damned comment moderation — took me five hours to get the parent to this comment up. Bumping the redesign as high on the list as I can.

If those of you with logins could take a gander at the unpublished comments once in a while, or — especially — do so after you post one (so it’ll apprear immediately), it would be extremely helpful. I’m sorry I didn’t think to ask sooner.

Thank you.

Giles , January 20, 2006 7:22 PM (#)

I just realized, after the moderation being in place for months, that if you don’t use a pop-up window, the moderation process winds up in a dead end with no link back to the page you were commenting from.

Aaaaarrrggh! For the love of.… To miss.…

Many apologies.

Giles , January 20, 2006 7:31 PM (#)

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