Jagged teeth of the city
Exploring London's invisible forces, MIDI magic, typography's truth, Lego colors, book cover art, Star Wars sounds, London estate stories, Broadway typography, China's ghost cities, and travel tales.
The jagged teeth of the city – The ley lines, the hallowed dome of St Paul’s, packs of hungry dogs and a tipsy surveyor in the 1930s; invisible forces shaping London's skyline.
All I Want for Christmas Is You, converted to MIDI – Horrifying yet kind of beautiful. Can you hear a voice that shouldn't be there?
How typography shapes our perception of truth – Filmmaker Errol Morris reveals why he now types all his manuscripts in Baskerville.
Lego colour chart – 182 colours in total.
Longform interview Chip Kidd – "The curious thing about doing a book cover is that you're creating a piece of art, but it is in service to a greater piece of art that is dictating what you're going to do. I may think I've come up with the greatest design in the world, but if the author doesn't like it, they win. And I have to start over."
Beep boop – Ben Burtt and the incredible sound design of Star Wars.
Changing the story – Why Andre Anderson and five writers made a book about their London estate and delivered a copy to every home on it.
From A to Z – 13 miles of typography on Broadway, from neon lights to mom-and-pop shop signs, from theatre marquees to building names.
Architecture waiting for a future – New Scientist on China's infamous “ghost cities”, sprawling wastelands of empty streets and uninhabited megastructures, without a human being in sight.
Plans, trains and automobiles – Monocle founder Tyler Brûlé shares his thoughts on travel, from what makes a good airline to the problem with the UK’s rail stations and why it might be time to revive the road trip.