links for 2005-08-26
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"We asked the artists to listen to their album, "Give Up", and just let the music take their minds and hands wherever it takes them. The results are five, exclusive wallet designs."
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"It's not an archive of the rich and cool," Mr. Patterson noted. "It's about the tragic, glorious, sometimes depressing history of the Lower East Side."
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Who's shooting in the West Village, when they shot, what they did, and how well they behaved.
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The very first John Peel Day will take place on Thursday October 13th. The day will be a celebration of John's life and massive contribution to music and broadcasting with as many venues as possible staging gigs across the UK under the banner of Peel Day.
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What is it about reading on a Blackberry or PDA that encourages skimming and shallow thought?
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"Muji...has 15 in-house designers and also commissions top designers around the world to create its products. [They take] great pains to stress that these designers are anonymous, and he refuses to identify which products they've designed."
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Marc Ecko's "Getting Up" block party gathered a crew of Graf pioneers to work their magic on specially made replicas of the subway trains that once served as their canvas. Asurpisingly authentic and joyous celebration of hip-hop's culture and traditions.
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The physical version of Little by Little is a double CD set featuring both the full-length album, as well as a second bonus disc containing outtakes, alternate versions, and other snippets, in a beautifully designed package.
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Hear songs by the band, with annotated lyrics.
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"Thompson was standing in an aisle of the Virgin Megastore in Union Square, having been badgered into performing another curatorial stunt, a browse-and-buy session. Pick six disks, any six. And talk, please."
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"Launched two years ago by the boutique San Francisco-based brand consultancy Agenda Inc., American Brandstand is an ongoing effort to track the number of mentions of a brand in the lyrics of the Billboard Top 20 singles chart."
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The design journal of the nascent Stanford d.school. It is a magazine for the wider design community, which includes engineers and ethnographers, psychologists and philosophers.
Photographs on this site are © Kathryn Yu. Don't steal.






