New Eat Street Diners Club book. Only 2 left.
32 pages
Signed edition of 15
4.25" x 5.5" with wrap-around cover
2020
New Eat Street Diners Club book. Only 2 left.
32 pages
Signed edition of 15
4.25" x 5.5" with wrap-around cover
Reading through the Haruki Murakami's "Series of the Rat". So far, my favorite installment is Pinball, 1973. Surreal and real, it's relaxing to slow down to Murakami's pace.
Go the eatstreetdinersclub.com to read the latest comic and subscribe to future episodes.
Emphasis / Focal Point is a very powerful ingredient when designing messages that need to catch someone's eye. A strong focal point makes it almost impossible to not engage a viewers attention. While a design can have more than one focal point (aka accent), it is important to be careful—several focal points will turn the design into a three-ring circus.
Read MoreWaiting for justice in Minneapolis.
I’m hoping that a direct way to communicate our anger with the MPD is to tell them directly by email.
If you are financially secure, there’s need all around, but below are a few places to consider. I’m willing to bet a lot of you have already given.
Rebuild Lake Street - Any amount helps and the Minneapolis College of Art & Design will match donation by alumni if you send them a receipt.
Black Owned Minneapolis Restaurants - From City Pages
Minnesota Central Kitchen - There is a lot of need and Second Harvest Heartland is ready
Eat Street Diners Club #19: Are restaurants just a dream?
Read the Eat Street Diners Club on Substack!
Not likely. But I’m very excited to hear that the Eat Street Diners Club was shortlisted for Slate’s Cartoonist Studio Prize.
What a surprise and honor. Doing my best over here to not let the bad news obliterate the good.
For me, sitting still can be a struggle.
"Relax", is a small booklet that I picked up in a Wisconsin second hand store a number of years ago. I’ve often gone and re-read it whenever I felt on edge—carrying too much stress and worry.
I’d always wanted to reprint the booklet, so that it could be read by more people. The original goal was to slowly transcribe each chapter from the booklet with new illustrations. One chapter a month. The first chapter was posted on willdinski.com in January 2019. I live for big projects that I can slowly chip away at.
However, with more time that I would normally like to sit in front of my computer, and to put my mind on calmer things—I turned to completing the project a few months early.
With pervasive uncertainty, we are all carrying a lot of tension in our bodies. I hope that being aware of how you feel and the ways you can reduce that tension will keep us healthy.
Go here to read “Relax” written by Leonard M. Leonard, from 1952.
As you'll see below, design elements are repeated—but not exactly. Like music, there is a structure of repeated elements, with some variety to create interest. I can almost hear these graphics ...
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Is there a “suggestion box” in your shop or office? If it’s peace and quiet you want, a form of “suggestion box” is what you may need in your home too.
The “suggestions” are to be given to you by the walls, doors, pictures you see; even by the sounds you hear. And the only suggestions they will make are Peace, Quiet, Repose. You can get these suggestions so often that they will work on you; they will help calm your mind when you feel upset; they will give a feeling of quiet assurance to your whole being.
There is no hocus-pocus about it. You know that looking at something restful make you feel restful. And you know, too, that looking at something exciting tends to excite you. So when you want to relax, it isn’t much of a help to be confronted by the portrait of a nude burlesque queen, an exciting horse race scene, or a wall full of battle pictures.
Why not deposit that art work at the club house, or remove it to the rumpus room in the basement? And in your living quarters — especially the bedroom — where you want to escape from the turmoil and bring rest to your mind and body put restful sights on the walls.
Nobody can tell you what a restful scene is; the description must be your own. But finding pictures for your wall which give you a sense of quiet can be more important to you and to your family than finding genuine masterpieces.
The Psalmist had the perfect idea when he sand of “green pastures” and “still waters.” There is something especially soothing about pastoral scenes and views of tranquil water. Many nervous people find it soothing to look at an aquarium with tropical fish swimming about in it. The newest of these is a fish bowl which hangs on the wall like a picture.
There you have two ideas, but it’s a personal matter. Maybe watching fish will make you hungry, and a water scene may stir up memories of the time you nearly drowned! You must choose your own decorations, but try to choose the most restful you can find.
We are on safer ground with color. Green and blue-green are generally the most soothing colors. They are a good choice for the tense person unless they involve a dispute with other members of the family. Blue also is s sedative color, but too much can go too far. We speak of being “blue” for good reason; the color tends to be depressing.
Red is all right, but for the game room where you want to get up a lot of steam. It’s for stimulation, not sedation. As for yellow and orange, they can cheer you up. But they aren’t very likely to calm you down.
Don’t over look the effect of words. If you doubt the effect that word can have upon you, just look back to the letter which gave you bad news. And to another which raised your spirits sky-high! Just words, but they gave you thoughts.
With wall mottoes and slogans, suggest psychologist Ernest Dichter, you can keep imparting relaxing thoughts to your mind. So whenever you come across a quotation or message which give you reassurance and seems to make you feel more at ease all around, jot it down. The muster all the artist you can name make a sign of it. Place it where you will see it often, for example, on the saving mirror of your bathroom, or even the footboard of your bed.
Gladstone of England, who had a stormy life, brought repose into his bedroom. To help himself relax and get to sleep, he inscribed this Biblical message on his footboard: Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is tased on Thee.
Look to the Bible for the most reassuring messages you are likely to find anywhere. Don’t try to convince yourself, and don’t trouble to question. William James credits a few simple Bible quotations with saving his sanity during a period of great fear and tension. They were words that worked, never mind how.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale tells of a harassed and jittery business man who was virtually on the verge of hysteria when he chanced to open a Bible in his hotel room. He came upon the Twenty-Third Psalm and when he finally closed the book, his tension had vanished and he was completely at ease.
These are just a few of the relaxing and comforting messages in the Bible:
“… God hat not given us the sprit of fear; but of power, and of love, and a sound mind …” (II Timothy 1:7)
“Let not your heart be troubled.” (John 14:1)
“Cease from anger, and forsake wrath; fret no they self …” (Psalm 37:8)
“I will both lay me down in peace, and sleep; for thou, Lord, only makes me dwell in safety …” (Psalms)
“In quietness and in confidence shall be your strength …” (Isaiah 30:15)
But of course there are lots of enduring words outside the Bible, too. It would be surprising if you couldn’t find dozens of saying with a certain magic in them for you. Dr. Dichter says he can calm himself down with two simple words: “So what?” They have a way of taking the bigness out of problems and cutting worries down to size.
In the same vein, Abraham Lincoln, who was a melancholy man, comforted himself with the saying, “This, too, shall pass away.” He needed to be reminded that even sadness isn’t permanent.
Below is the first installment in a series where I’ll be sharing a collection of design principals. I call it a visual study in the basic elements of my craft that can also serve as a guide when communicating what helps make a particular visual or design interesting to look at.
Read MoreAre you a cartoonist or printmaker? Would you like to exhibit at the 2020 Autoptic Festival? I think that you are AND YOU DO!
All applicants who apply by April 15th, 2020 will be notified of the status of their application by May 1st, 2020.
Pre-Order Holy Hannah and get your copy of Eat Street Diners Club Volume 2.