• So, ILM is back at it with their magic wands, turning the Marvel universe into a shadowy playground for the Thunderbolts. I mean, who needs good writing or character development when you can just drown everything in VFX shadows and silhouettes? Chad Wiebe and Lee McNair must be having a blast explaining how they created complex sequences that make you forget there’s a plot. Let’s all applaud the real heroes behind the scenes! Because if there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s that a well-placed shadow can definitely distract from a mediocre storyline. Bravo, ILM, bravo!

    #Thunderbolts #VFX #ILM #Marvel #CinemaMagic
    So, ILM is back at it with their magic wands, turning the Marvel universe into a shadowy playground for the Thunderbolts. I mean, who needs good writing or character development when you can just drown everything in VFX shadows and silhouettes? Chad Wiebe and Lee McNair must be having a blast explaining how they created complex sequences that make you forget there’s a plot. Let’s all applaud the real heroes behind the scenes! Because if there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s that a well-placed shadow can definitely distract from a mediocre storyline. Bravo, ILM, bravo! #Thunderbolts #VFX #ILM #Marvel #CinemaMagic
    VFX shadows, silhouettes, and the Sentry: ILM’s work on Marvel’s Thunderbolts
    In this fxpodcast, we speak with ILM’s Chad Wiebe and Lee McNair to unpack the layers of work that went into some of the film's most complex sequences.
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Jurassic World: Rebirth? Really? It’s infuriating to see how this franchise continues to churn out mediocre content, relying on flashy VFX instead of a coherent storyline. The lush, danger-filled world they’re showcasing is nothing more than a glorified CGI playground! Where’s the creativity? Where’s the originality? This installment is just another cash grab, feeding off our nostalgia while serving us recycled plot lines and forgettable characters. It’s time for filmmakers to stop hiding behind technology and start delivering real substance. If they can’t do better, maybe it’s time to put this tired franchise to rest!

    #JurassicWorld #VFXShow #MovieCritique #DinosaurFranchise #FilmIndustry
    Jurassic World: Rebirth? Really? It’s infuriating to see how this franchise continues to churn out mediocre content, relying on flashy VFX instead of a coherent storyline. The lush, danger-filled world they’re showcasing is nothing more than a glorified CGI playground! Where’s the creativity? Where’s the originality? This installment is just another cash grab, feeding off our nostalgia while serving us recycled plot lines and forgettable characters. It’s time for filmmakers to stop hiding behind technology and start delivering real substance. If they can’t do better, maybe it’s time to put this tired franchise to rest! #JurassicWorld #VFXShow #MovieCritique #DinosaurFranchise #FilmIndustry
    VFXShow 298: Jurassic World: Rebirth
    The guys take a journey into the lush, danger-filled world of Jurassic World: Rebirth, the latest installment in the iconic dinosaur franchise.
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Transforming your neighborhood into an XR amusement park sounds like a big deal, right? Well, DreamPark has done it. They turned streets and squares into some sort of mixed reality playground. Not sure what to think about it, honestly. It’s there, but is it really exciting? Just another change, I guess. Maybe it’ll be fun for some, but I’m not feeling it.

    #DreamPark #XR #MixedReality #Neighborhood #AmusementPark
    Transforming your neighborhood into an XR amusement park sounds like a big deal, right? Well, DreamPark has done it. They turned streets and squares into some sort of mixed reality playground. Not sure what to think about it, honestly. It’s there, but is it really exciting? Just another change, I guess. Maybe it’ll be fun for some, but I’m not feeling it. #DreamPark #XR #MixedReality #Neighborhood #AmusementPark
    Et si votre quartier devenait un parc XR ? DreamPark l’a fait
    Transformer vos rues, vos places, votre quartier en un parc d’attractions en réalité mixte, c’est […] Cet article Et si votre quartier devenait un parc XR ? DreamPark l’a fait a été publié sur REALITE-VIRTUELLE.COM.
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • What a disaster! The situation with Subnautica 2 has spiraled into a pathetic blame game, with Krafton throwing former studio leaders under the bus for the game's delay. Seriously? Instead of taking responsibility, they're pointing fingers like children in a playground fight! This is not just a setback for fans eagerly awaiting the sequel; it’s a glaring example of how poor leadership can lead to catastrophic failures in the gaming industry. We deserve better than this ridiculous drama! Krafton needs to step up and deliver on their promises instead of deflecting blame. Enough is enough!

    #Subnautica2 #Krafton #GameDelay #GamingNews #LeadershipFailure
    What a disaster! The situation with Subnautica 2 has spiraled into a pathetic blame game, with Krafton throwing former studio leaders under the bus for the game's delay. Seriously? Instead of taking responsibility, they're pointing fingers like children in a playground fight! This is not just a setback for fans eagerly awaiting the sequel; it’s a glaring example of how poor leadership can lead to catastrophic failures in the gaming industry. We deserve better than this ridiculous drama! Krafton needs to step up and deliver on their promises instead of deflecting blame. Enough is enough! #Subnautica2 #Krafton #GameDelay #GamingNews #LeadershipFailure
    WWW.ACTUGAMING.NET
    Subnautica 2 : Krafton accuse les anciens leaders du studio d’avoir entraîné le report du jeu
    ActuGaming.net Subnautica 2 : Krafton accuse les anciens leaders du studio d’avoir entraîné le report du jeu L’affaire Subnautica 2 prend maintenant des allures de règlements de compte par médias interposés. Il […] L'article Subnau
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Exciting news for all creatives out there! The Premier League has just teamed up with Adobe, and this collaboration is set to transform football into the world’s biggest creative playground! Imagine the endless possibilities for artists, designers, and fans to express their passion for the beautiful game. This partnership will unlock a treasure trove of tools and inspiration, empowering us to unleash our creativity like never before!

    Let’s celebrate this amazing opportunity that merges sports with creativity! Together, we can innovate, inspire, and create magic on and off the pitch!

    #PremierLeague #Adobe #Creativity #Football #Inspiration
    🎉⚽ Exciting news for all creatives out there! The Premier League has just teamed up with Adobe, and this collaboration is set to transform football into the world’s biggest creative playground! 🌍✨ Imagine the endless possibilities for artists, designers, and fans to express their passion for the beautiful game. This partnership will unlock a treasure trove of tools and inspiration, empowering us to unleash our creativity like never before! 💖🎨 Let’s celebrate this amazing opportunity that merges sports with creativity! Together, we can innovate, inspire, and create magic on and off the pitch! 🚀💪 #PremierLeague #Adobe #Creativity #Football #Inspiration
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Nex Playground is apparently at its lowest price ever after some Black Friday hype. I mean, it's 29% off on Prime Day, which is kind of a deal if you're into that “Netflix for games” thing. Not sure if that's exciting or just... whatever. Just more games to shuffle through, I guess. If you’re looking to spend some time, maybe check it out. Or not.

    #NexPlayground #PrimeDay #GamingDeals #BlackFriday #Sale
    Nex Playground is apparently at its lowest price ever after some Black Friday hype. I mean, it's 29% off on Prime Day, which is kind of a deal if you're into that “Netflix for games” thing. Not sure if that's exciting or just... whatever. Just more games to shuffle through, I guess. If you’re looking to spend some time, maybe check it out. Or not. #NexPlayground #PrimeDay #GamingDeals #BlackFriday #Sale
    WWW.CREATIVEBLOQ.COM
    Nex Playground hits lowest price yet after Black Friday sellout
    I called it “Netflix for games” in my review – and now it's 29% off on Prime Day.
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Tencent investit encore plus d'argent dans le nouveau studio du fondateur de Playground Games. Lighthouse Games, fondé par Gavin Raeburn en 2022, travaille actuellement sur une franchise de course. C'est intéressant, je suppose. Une autre entreprise qui reçoit du financement pour créer quelque chose. On se demande si ça va être vraiment différent des autres jeux de course qui sont déjà sur le marché. On a déjà vu tant de choses dans ce genre, des voitures qui vont vite, des pistes, des compétitions… tout ça.

    Gavin Raeburn a une certaine réputation grâce à Playground Games, mais est-ce que cela garantit que Lighthouse Games produira quelque chose de mémorable ? Peut-être que Tencent, avec son investissement, espère que cette nouvelle aventure conduira à des résultats impressionnants. Mais bon, la réalité est souvent moins excitante que les promesses. On se retrouve souvent avec des jeux qui se ressemblent et qui ne font que passer le temps.

    Le fait que Lighthouse Games soit en train de développer une franchise de course soulève des questions. Est-ce que le monde a vraiment besoin d'un autre jeu de course ? Peut-être qu'ils essaient de se démarquer avec des éléments innovants, mais à ce stade, je ne suis pas sûr que cela suffira à capter l'attention du public.

    En attendant, on continue à attendre et à voir ce que cela va donner. Peut-être qu'ils vont annoncer quelque chose d'intéressant, mais avec tant de jeux qui sortent chaque mois, il est facile de perdre l'intérêt. Il se pourrait que, d'ici-là, on soit déjà passés à autre chose. Le temps nous le dira.

    #Tencent #LighthouseGames #GavinRaeburn #JeuxVidéo #FranchiseDeCourse
    Tencent investit encore plus d'argent dans le nouveau studio du fondateur de Playground Games. Lighthouse Games, fondé par Gavin Raeburn en 2022, travaille actuellement sur une franchise de course. C'est intéressant, je suppose. Une autre entreprise qui reçoit du financement pour créer quelque chose. On se demande si ça va être vraiment différent des autres jeux de course qui sont déjà sur le marché. On a déjà vu tant de choses dans ce genre, des voitures qui vont vite, des pistes, des compétitions… tout ça. Gavin Raeburn a une certaine réputation grâce à Playground Games, mais est-ce que cela garantit que Lighthouse Games produira quelque chose de mémorable ? Peut-être que Tencent, avec son investissement, espère que cette nouvelle aventure conduira à des résultats impressionnants. Mais bon, la réalité est souvent moins excitante que les promesses. On se retrouve souvent avec des jeux qui se ressemblent et qui ne font que passer le temps. Le fait que Lighthouse Games soit en train de développer une franchise de course soulève des questions. Est-ce que le monde a vraiment besoin d'un autre jeu de course ? Peut-être qu'ils essaient de se démarquer avec des éléments innovants, mais à ce stade, je ne suis pas sûr que cela suffira à capter l'attention du public. En attendant, on continue à attendre et à voir ce que cela va donner. Peut-être qu'ils vont annoncer quelque chose d'intéressant, mais avec tant de jeux qui sortent chaque mois, il est facile de perdre l'intérêt. Il se pourrait que, d'ici-là, on soit déjà passés à autre chose. Le temps nous le dira. #Tencent #LighthouseGames #GavinRaeburn #JeuxVidéo #FranchiseDeCourse
    Tencent sinks more cash into Playground Games founder's new studio
    Lighthouse Games was established by Gavin Raeburn in 2022 and is currently working on a racing franchise.
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    Sad
    Angry
    484
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • In a world where creativity reigns supreme, Adobe has just gifted us with a shiny new toy: the Firefly Boards. Yes, folks, it’s the collaborative moodboarding app that has emerged from beta, as if it were a butterfly finally breaking free from its cocoon—or maybe just a slightly confused caterpillar trying to figure out what it wants to be.

    Now, why should creative agencies care about this groundbreaking development? Well, because who wouldn’t want to spend hours staring at a digital canvas filled with pretty pictures and random color palettes? Firefly Boards promises to revolutionize the way we moodboard, or as I like to call it, "pretending to be productive while scrolling through Pinterest."

    Imagine this: your team, huddled around a computer, desperately trying to agree on the shade of blue that will represent their brand. A task that could take days of heated debate is now streamlined into a digital playground where everyone can throw their ideas onto a board like a toddler at a paint store.

    But let's be real. Isn’t this just a fancy way of saying, “Let’s all agree on this one aesthetic and ignore all our differences”? Creativity is all about chaos, and yet, here we are, trying to tidy up the mess with collaborative moodboarding apps. What’s next? A group hug to decide on the font size?

    Of course, Adobe knows that creative agencies have an insatiable thirst for shiny features. They’ve marketed Firefly Boards as a ‘collaborative’ tool, but let’s face it—most of us are just trying to find an excuse to use the 'fire' emoji in a professional setting. It’s as if they’re saying, “Trust us, this will make your life easier!” while we silently nod, hoping that it won’t eventually lead to a 10-hour Zoom call discussing the merits of various shades of beige.

    And let’s not forget the inevitable influx of social media posts proclaiming, “Check out our latest Firefly Board!” — because nothing says ‘creative genius’ quite like a screenshot of a digital board filled with stock images and overused motivational quotes. Can’t wait to see how many ‘likes’ that garners!

    So, dear creative agencies, while you’re busy diving into the wonders of Adobe Firefly Boards, remember to take a moment to appreciate the irony. You’re now collaborating on moodboards, yet it feels like we’ve all just agreed to put our creative souls on a digital leash. But hey, at least you’ll have a fun platform to pretend you’re being innovative while you argue about which filter to use on your next Instagram post.

    #AdobeFirefly #Moodboarding #CreativeAgencies #DigitalCreativity #DesignHumor
    In a world where creativity reigns supreme, Adobe has just gifted us with a shiny new toy: the Firefly Boards. Yes, folks, it’s the collaborative moodboarding app that has emerged from beta, as if it were a butterfly finally breaking free from its cocoon—or maybe just a slightly confused caterpillar trying to figure out what it wants to be. Now, why should creative agencies care about this groundbreaking development? Well, because who wouldn’t want to spend hours staring at a digital canvas filled with pretty pictures and random color palettes? Firefly Boards promises to revolutionize the way we moodboard, or as I like to call it, "pretending to be productive while scrolling through Pinterest." Imagine this: your team, huddled around a computer, desperately trying to agree on the shade of blue that will represent their brand. A task that could take days of heated debate is now streamlined into a digital playground where everyone can throw their ideas onto a board like a toddler at a paint store. But let's be real. Isn’t this just a fancy way of saying, “Let’s all agree on this one aesthetic and ignore all our differences”? Creativity is all about chaos, and yet, here we are, trying to tidy up the mess with collaborative moodboarding apps. What’s next? A group hug to decide on the font size? Of course, Adobe knows that creative agencies have an insatiable thirst for shiny features. They’ve marketed Firefly Boards as a ‘collaborative’ tool, but let’s face it—most of us are just trying to find an excuse to use the 'fire' emoji in a professional setting. It’s as if they’re saying, “Trust us, this will make your life easier!” while we silently nod, hoping that it won’t eventually lead to a 10-hour Zoom call discussing the merits of various shades of beige. And let’s not forget the inevitable influx of social media posts proclaiming, “Check out our latest Firefly Board!” — because nothing says ‘creative genius’ quite like a screenshot of a digital board filled with stock images and overused motivational quotes. Can’t wait to see how many ‘likes’ that garners! So, dear creative agencies, while you’re busy diving into the wonders of Adobe Firefly Boards, remember to take a moment to appreciate the irony. You’re now collaborating on moodboards, yet it feels like we’ve all just agreed to put our creative souls on a digital leash. But hey, at least you’ll have a fun platform to pretend you’re being innovative while you argue about which filter to use on your next Instagram post. #AdobeFirefly #Moodboarding #CreativeAgencies #DigitalCreativity #DesignHumor
    Why creative agencies need to know about new Adobe Firefly Boards
    The collaborative moodboarding app is now out of beta.
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    Angry
    Sad
    512
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • The recent announcement of CEAD inaugurating a center dedicated to 3D printing for manufacturing boat hulls is nothing short of infuriating. We are living in an age where technological advancements should lead to significant improvements in efficiency and sustainability, yet here we are, celebrating a move that reeks of superficial progress and misguided priorities.

    First off, let’s talk about the so-called “Maritime Application Center” (MAC) in Delft. While they dazzle us with their fancy new facility, one has to question the real implications of such a center. Are they genuinely solving the pressing issues of the maritime industry, or are they merely jumping on the bandwagon of 3D printing hype? The idea of using large-scale additive manufacturing to produce boat hulls sounds revolutionary, but let’s face it: this is just another example of throwing technology at a problem without truly understanding the underlying challenges that plague the industry.

    The maritime sector is facing severe environmental concerns, including pollution from traditional manufacturing processes and shipping practices. Instead of addressing these burning issues head-on, CEAD and others like them seem content to play with shiny new tools. 3D printing, in theory, could reduce waste—a point they love to hammer home in their marketing. But what about the energy consumption and material sourcing involved? Are we simply swapping one form of environmental degradation for another?

    Furthermore, the focus on large-scale 3D printing for manufacturing boat hulls raises significant questions about quality and safety. The maritime industry is not a playground for experimental technologies; lives are at stake. Relying on printed components that could potentially have structural weaknesses is a reckless gamble, and the consequences could be disastrous. Are we prepared to accept the liability if these hulls fail at sea?

    Let’s not forget the economic implications of this move. Sure, CEAD is likely patting themselves on the back for creating jobs at the MAC, but how many traditional jobs are they putting at risk? The maritime industry relies on skilled labor and craftsmanship that cannot simply be replaced by a machine. By pushing for 3D printing at such a scale, they threaten the livelihoods of countless workers who have dedicated their lives to mastering this trade.

    In conclusion, while CEAD’s center for 3D printing boat hulls may sound impressive on paper, the reality is that it’s a misguided effort that overlooks critical aspects of sustainability, safety, and social responsibility. We need to demand more from our industries and hold them accountable for their actions instead of blindly celebrating every shiny new innovation. The maritime industry deserves solutions that genuinely address its challenges rather than a mere technological gimmick.

    #MaritimeIndustry #3DPrinting #Sustainability #CEAD #BoatManufacturing
    The recent announcement of CEAD inaugurating a center dedicated to 3D printing for manufacturing boat hulls is nothing short of infuriating. We are living in an age where technological advancements should lead to significant improvements in efficiency and sustainability, yet here we are, celebrating a move that reeks of superficial progress and misguided priorities. First off, let’s talk about the so-called “Maritime Application Center” (MAC) in Delft. While they dazzle us with their fancy new facility, one has to question the real implications of such a center. Are they genuinely solving the pressing issues of the maritime industry, or are they merely jumping on the bandwagon of 3D printing hype? The idea of using large-scale additive manufacturing to produce boat hulls sounds revolutionary, but let’s face it: this is just another example of throwing technology at a problem without truly understanding the underlying challenges that plague the industry. The maritime sector is facing severe environmental concerns, including pollution from traditional manufacturing processes and shipping practices. Instead of addressing these burning issues head-on, CEAD and others like them seem content to play with shiny new tools. 3D printing, in theory, could reduce waste—a point they love to hammer home in their marketing. But what about the energy consumption and material sourcing involved? Are we simply swapping one form of environmental degradation for another? Furthermore, the focus on large-scale 3D printing for manufacturing boat hulls raises significant questions about quality and safety. The maritime industry is not a playground for experimental technologies; lives are at stake. Relying on printed components that could potentially have structural weaknesses is a reckless gamble, and the consequences could be disastrous. Are we prepared to accept the liability if these hulls fail at sea? Let’s not forget the economic implications of this move. Sure, CEAD is likely patting themselves on the back for creating jobs at the MAC, but how many traditional jobs are they putting at risk? The maritime industry relies on skilled labor and craftsmanship that cannot simply be replaced by a machine. By pushing for 3D printing at such a scale, they threaten the livelihoods of countless workers who have dedicated their lives to mastering this trade. In conclusion, while CEAD’s center for 3D printing boat hulls may sound impressive on paper, the reality is that it’s a misguided effort that overlooks critical aspects of sustainability, safety, and social responsibility. We need to demand more from our industries and hold them accountable for their actions instead of blindly celebrating every shiny new innovation. The maritime industry deserves solutions that genuinely address its challenges rather than a mere technological gimmick. #MaritimeIndustry #3DPrinting #Sustainability #CEAD #BoatManufacturing
    CEAD inaugura un centro dedicado a la impresión 3D para fabricar cascos de barcos
    La industria marítima está experimentando una transformación importante gracias a la impresión 3D de gran formato. El grupo holandés CEAD, especialista en fabricación aditiva a gran escala, ha inaugurado recientemente su Maritime Application Center (
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    Sad
    Angry
    587
    1 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
  • Inside the thinking behind Frontify Futures' standout brand identity

    Who knows where branding will go in the future? However, for many of us working in the creative industries, it's our job to know. So it's something we need to start talking about, and Frontify Futures wants to be the platform where that conversation unfolds.
    This ambitious new thought leadership initiative from Frontify brings together an extraordinary coalition of voices—CMOs who've scaled global brands, creative leaders reimagining possibilities, strategy directors pioneering new approaches, and cultural forecasters mapping emerging opportunities—to explore how effectiveness, innovation, and scale will shape tomorrow's brand-building landscape.
    But Frontify Futures isn't just another content platform. Excitingly, from a design perspective, it's also a living experiment in what brand identity can become when technology meets craft, when systems embrace chaos, and when the future itself becomes a design material.
    Endless variation
    What makes Frontify Futures' typography unique isn't just its custom foundation: it's how that foundation enables endless variation and evolution. This was primarily achieved, reveals developer and digital art director Daniel Powell, by building bespoke tools for the project.

    "Rather than rely solely on streamlined tools built for speed and production, we started building our own," he explains. "The first was a node-based design tool that takes our custom Frame and Hairline fonts as a base and uses them as the foundations for our type generator. With it, we can generate unique type variations for each content strand—each article, even—and create both static and animated type, exportable as video or rendered live in the browser."
    Each of these tools included what Daniel calls a "chaos element: a small but intentional glitch in the system. A microstatement about the nature of the future: that it can be anticipated but never fully known. It's our way of keeping gesture alive inside the system."
    One of the clearest examples of this is the colour palette generator. "It samples from a dynamic photo grid tied to a rotating colour wheel that completes one full revolution per year," Daniel explains. "But here's the twist: wind speed and direction in St. Gallen, Switzerland—Frontify's HQ—nudges the wheel unpredictably off-centre. It's a subtle, living mechanic; each article contains a log of the wind data in its code as a kind of Easter Egg."

    Another favourite of Daniel's—yet to be released—is an expanded version of Conway's Game of Life. "It's been running continuously for over a month now, evolving patterns used in one of the content strand headers," he reveals. "The designer becomes a kind of photographer, capturing moments from a petri dish of generative motion."
    Core Philosophy
    In developing this unique identity, two phrases stood out to Daniel as guiding lights from the outset. The first was, 'We will show, not tell.'
    "This became the foundation for how we approached the identity," recalls Daniel. "It had to feel like a playground: open, experimental, and fluid. Not overly precious or prescriptive. A system the Frontify team could truly own, shape, and evolve. A platform, not a final product. A foundation, just as the future is always built on the past."

    The second guiding phrase, pulled directly from Frontify's rebrand materials, felt like "a call to action," says Daniel. "'Gestural and geometric. Human and machine. Art and science.' It's a tension that feels especially relevant in the creative industries today. As technology accelerates, we ask ourselves: how do we still hold onto our craft? What does it mean to be expressive in an increasingly systemised world?"
    Stripped back and skeletal typography
    The identity that Daniel and his team created reflects these themes through typography that literally embodies the platform's core philosophy. It really started from this idea of the past being built upon the 'foundations' of the past," he explains. "At the time Frontify Futures was being created, Frontify itself was going through a rebrand. With that, they'd started using a new variable typeface called Cranny, a custom cut of Azurio by Narrow Type."
    Daniel's team took Cranny and "pushed it into a stripped-back and almost skeletal take". The result was Crany-Frame and Crany-Hairline. "These fonts then served as our base scaffolding," he continues. "They were never seen in design, but instead, we applied decoration them to produce new typefaces for each content strand, giving the identity the space to grow and allow new ideas and shapes to form."

    As Daniel saw it, the demands on the typeface were pretty simple. "It needed to set an atmosphere. We needed it needed to feel alive. We wanted it to be something shifting and repositioning. And so, while we have a bunch of static cuts of each base style, we rarely use them; the typefaces you see on the website and social only exist at the moment as a string of parameters to create a general style that we use to create live animating versions of the font generated on the fly."
    In addition to setting the atmosphere, it needed to be extremely flexible and feature live inputs, as a significant part of the branding is about the unpredictability of the future. "So Daniel's team built in those aforementioned "chaos moments where everything from user interaction to live windspeeds can affect the font."
    Design Process
    The process of creating the typefaces is a fascinating one. "We started by working with the custom cut of Azuriofrom Narrow Type. We then redrew it to take inspiration from how a frame and a hairline could be produced from this original cut. From there, we built a type generation tool that uses them as a base.
    "It's a custom node-based system that lets us really get in there and play with the overlays for everything from grid-sizing, shapes and timing for the animation," he outlines. "We used this tool to design the variants for different content strands. We weren't just designing letterforms; we were designing a comprehensive toolset that could evolve in tandem with the content.
    "That became a big part of the process: designing systems that designers could actually use, not just look at; again, it was a wider conversation and concept around the future and how designers and machines can work together."

    In short, the evolution of the typeface system reflects the platform's broader commitment to continuous growth and adaptation." The whole idea was to make something open enough to keep building on," Daniel stresses. "We've already got tools in place to generate new weights, shapes and animated variants, and the tool itself still has a ton of unused functionality.
    "I can see that growing as new content strands emerge; we'll keep adapting the type with them," he adds. "It's less about version numbers and more about ongoing movement. The system's alive; that's the point.
    A provocation for the industry
    In this context, the Frontify Futures identity represents more than smart visual branding; it's also a manifesto for how creative systems might evolve in an age of increasing automation and systematisation. By building unpredictability into their tools, embracing the tension between human craft and machine precision, and creating systems that grow and adapt rather than merely scale, Daniel and the Frontify team have created something that feels genuinely forward-looking.
    For creatives grappling with similar questions about the future of their craft, Frontify Futures offers both inspiration and practical demonstration. It shows how brands can remain human while embracing technological capability, how systems can be both consistent and surprising, and how the future itself can become a creative medium.
    This clever approach suggests that the future of branding lies not in choosing between human creativity and systematic efficiency but in finding new ways to make them work together, creating something neither could achieve alone.
    #inside #thinking #behind #frontify #futures039
    Inside the thinking behind Frontify Futures' standout brand identity
    Who knows where branding will go in the future? However, for many of us working in the creative industries, it's our job to know. So it's something we need to start talking about, and Frontify Futures wants to be the platform where that conversation unfolds. This ambitious new thought leadership initiative from Frontify brings together an extraordinary coalition of voices—CMOs who've scaled global brands, creative leaders reimagining possibilities, strategy directors pioneering new approaches, and cultural forecasters mapping emerging opportunities—to explore how effectiveness, innovation, and scale will shape tomorrow's brand-building landscape. But Frontify Futures isn't just another content platform. Excitingly, from a design perspective, it's also a living experiment in what brand identity can become when technology meets craft, when systems embrace chaos, and when the future itself becomes a design material. Endless variation What makes Frontify Futures' typography unique isn't just its custom foundation: it's how that foundation enables endless variation and evolution. This was primarily achieved, reveals developer and digital art director Daniel Powell, by building bespoke tools for the project. "Rather than rely solely on streamlined tools built for speed and production, we started building our own," he explains. "The first was a node-based design tool that takes our custom Frame and Hairline fonts as a base and uses them as the foundations for our type generator. With it, we can generate unique type variations for each content strand—each article, even—and create both static and animated type, exportable as video or rendered live in the browser." Each of these tools included what Daniel calls a "chaos element: a small but intentional glitch in the system. A microstatement about the nature of the future: that it can be anticipated but never fully known. It's our way of keeping gesture alive inside the system." One of the clearest examples of this is the colour palette generator. "It samples from a dynamic photo grid tied to a rotating colour wheel that completes one full revolution per year," Daniel explains. "But here's the twist: wind speed and direction in St. Gallen, Switzerland—Frontify's HQ—nudges the wheel unpredictably off-centre. It's a subtle, living mechanic; each article contains a log of the wind data in its code as a kind of Easter Egg." Another favourite of Daniel's—yet to be released—is an expanded version of Conway's Game of Life. "It's been running continuously for over a month now, evolving patterns used in one of the content strand headers," he reveals. "The designer becomes a kind of photographer, capturing moments from a petri dish of generative motion." Core Philosophy In developing this unique identity, two phrases stood out to Daniel as guiding lights from the outset. The first was, 'We will show, not tell.' "This became the foundation for how we approached the identity," recalls Daniel. "It had to feel like a playground: open, experimental, and fluid. Not overly precious or prescriptive. A system the Frontify team could truly own, shape, and evolve. A platform, not a final product. A foundation, just as the future is always built on the past." The second guiding phrase, pulled directly from Frontify's rebrand materials, felt like "a call to action," says Daniel. "'Gestural and geometric. Human and machine. Art and science.' It's a tension that feels especially relevant in the creative industries today. As technology accelerates, we ask ourselves: how do we still hold onto our craft? What does it mean to be expressive in an increasingly systemised world?" Stripped back and skeletal typography The identity that Daniel and his team created reflects these themes through typography that literally embodies the platform's core philosophy. It really started from this idea of the past being built upon the 'foundations' of the past," he explains. "At the time Frontify Futures was being created, Frontify itself was going through a rebrand. With that, they'd started using a new variable typeface called Cranny, a custom cut of Azurio by Narrow Type." Daniel's team took Cranny and "pushed it into a stripped-back and almost skeletal take". The result was Crany-Frame and Crany-Hairline. "These fonts then served as our base scaffolding," he continues. "They were never seen in design, but instead, we applied decoration them to produce new typefaces for each content strand, giving the identity the space to grow and allow new ideas and shapes to form." As Daniel saw it, the demands on the typeface were pretty simple. "It needed to set an atmosphere. We needed it needed to feel alive. We wanted it to be something shifting and repositioning. And so, while we have a bunch of static cuts of each base style, we rarely use them; the typefaces you see on the website and social only exist at the moment as a string of parameters to create a general style that we use to create live animating versions of the font generated on the fly." In addition to setting the atmosphere, it needed to be extremely flexible and feature live inputs, as a significant part of the branding is about the unpredictability of the future. "So Daniel's team built in those aforementioned "chaos moments where everything from user interaction to live windspeeds can affect the font." Design Process The process of creating the typefaces is a fascinating one. "We started by working with the custom cut of Azuriofrom Narrow Type. We then redrew it to take inspiration from how a frame and a hairline could be produced from this original cut. From there, we built a type generation tool that uses them as a base. "It's a custom node-based system that lets us really get in there and play with the overlays for everything from grid-sizing, shapes and timing for the animation," he outlines. "We used this tool to design the variants for different content strands. We weren't just designing letterforms; we were designing a comprehensive toolset that could evolve in tandem with the content. "That became a big part of the process: designing systems that designers could actually use, not just look at; again, it was a wider conversation and concept around the future and how designers and machines can work together." In short, the evolution of the typeface system reflects the platform's broader commitment to continuous growth and adaptation." The whole idea was to make something open enough to keep building on," Daniel stresses. "We've already got tools in place to generate new weights, shapes and animated variants, and the tool itself still has a ton of unused functionality. "I can see that growing as new content strands emerge; we'll keep adapting the type with them," he adds. "It's less about version numbers and more about ongoing movement. The system's alive; that's the point. A provocation for the industry In this context, the Frontify Futures identity represents more than smart visual branding; it's also a manifesto for how creative systems might evolve in an age of increasing automation and systematisation. By building unpredictability into their tools, embracing the tension between human craft and machine precision, and creating systems that grow and adapt rather than merely scale, Daniel and the Frontify team have created something that feels genuinely forward-looking. For creatives grappling with similar questions about the future of their craft, Frontify Futures offers both inspiration and practical demonstration. It shows how brands can remain human while embracing technological capability, how systems can be both consistent and surprising, and how the future itself can become a creative medium. This clever approach suggests that the future of branding lies not in choosing between human creativity and systematic efficiency but in finding new ways to make them work together, creating something neither could achieve alone. #inside #thinking #behind #frontify #futures039
    WWW.CREATIVEBOOM.COM
    Inside the thinking behind Frontify Futures' standout brand identity
    Who knows where branding will go in the future? However, for many of us working in the creative industries, it's our job to know. So it's something we need to start talking about, and Frontify Futures wants to be the platform where that conversation unfolds. This ambitious new thought leadership initiative from Frontify brings together an extraordinary coalition of voices—CMOs who've scaled global brands, creative leaders reimagining possibilities, strategy directors pioneering new approaches, and cultural forecasters mapping emerging opportunities—to explore how effectiveness, innovation, and scale will shape tomorrow's brand-building landscape. But Frontify Futures isn't just another content platform. Excitingly, from a design perspective, it's also a living experiment in what brand identity can become when technology meets craft, when systems embrace chaos, and when the future itself becomes a design material. Endless variation What makes Frontify Futures' typography unique isn't just its custom foundation: it's how that foundation enables endless variation and evolution. This was primarily achieved, reveals developer and digital art director Daniel Powell, by building bespoke tools for the project. "Rather than rely solely on streamlined tools built for speed and production, we started building our own," he explains. "The first was a node-based design tool that takes our custom Frame and Hairline fonts as a base and uses them as the foundations for our type generator. With it, we can generate unique type variations for each content strand—each article, even—and create both static and animated type, exportable as video or rendered live in the browser." Each of these tools included what Daniel calls a "chaos element: a small but intentional glitch in the system. A microstatement about the nature of the future: that it can be anticipated but never fully known. It's our way of keeping gesture alive inside the system." One of the clearest examples of this is the colour palette generator. "It samples from a dynamic photo grid tied to a rotating colour wheel that completes one full revolution per year," Daniel explains. "But here's the twist: wind speed and direction in St. Gallen, Switzerland—Frontify's HQ—nudges the wheel unpredictably off-centre. It's a subtle, living mechanic; each article contains a log of the wind data in its code as a kind of Easter Egg." Another favourite of Daniel's—yet to be released—is an expanded version of Conway's Game of Life. "It's been running continuously for over a month now, evolving patterns used in one of the content strand headers," he reveals. "The designer becomes a kind of photographer, capturing moments from a petri dish of generative motion." Core Philosophy In developing this unique identity, two phrases stood out to Daniel as guiding lights from the outset. The first was, 'We will show, not tell.' "This became the foundation for how we approached the identity," recalls Daniel. "It had to feel like a playground: open, experimental, and fluid. Not overly precious or prescriptive. A system the Frontify team could truly own, shape, and evolve. A platform, not a final product. A foundation, just as the future is always built on the past." The second guiding phrase, pulled directly from Frontify's rebrand materials, felt like "a call to action," says Daniel. "'Gestural and geometric. Human and machine. Art and science.' It's a tension that feels especially relevant in the creative industries today. As technology accelerates, we ask ourselves: how do we still hold onto our craft? What does it mean to be expressive in an increasingly systemised world?" Stripped back and skeletal typography The identity that Daniel and his team created reflects these themes through typography that literally embodies the platform's core philosophy. It really started from this idea of the past being built upon the 'foundations' of the past," he explains. "At the time Frontify Futures was being created, Frontify itself was going through a rebrand. With that, they'd started using a new variable typeface called Cranny, a custom cut of Azurio by Narrow Type." Daniel's team took Cranny and "pushed it into a stripped-back and almost skeletal take". The result was Crany-Frame and Crany-Hairline. "These fonts then served as our base scaffolding," he continues. "They were never seen in design, but instead, we applied decoration them to produce new typefaces for each content strand, giving the identity the space to grow and allow new ideas and shapes to form." As Daniel saw it, the demands on the typeface were pretty simple. "It needed to set an atmosphere. We needed it needed to feel alive. We wanted it to be something shifting and repositioning. And so, while we have a bunch of static cuts of each base style, we rarely use them; the typefaces you see on the website and social only exist at the moment as a string of parameters to create a general style that we use to create live animating versions of the font generated on the fly." In addition to setting the atmosphere, it needed to be extremely flexible and feature live inputs, as a significant part of the branding is about the unpredictability of the future. "So Daniel's team built in those aforementioned "chaos moments where everything from user interaction to live windspeeds can affect the font." Design Process The process of creating the typefaces is a fascinating one. "We started by working with the custom cut of Azurio (Cranny) from Narrow Type. We then redrew it to take inspiration from how a frame and a hairline could be produced from this original cut. From there, we built a type generation tool that uses them as a base. "It's a custom node-based system that lets us really get in there and play with the overlays for everything from grid-sizing, shapes and timing for the animation," he outlines. "We used this tool to design the variants for different content strands. We weren't just designing letterforms; we were designing a comprehensive toolset that could evolve in tandem with the content. "That became a big part of the process: designing systems that designers could actually use, not just look at; again, it was a wider conversation and concept around the future and how designers and machines can work together." In short, the evolution of the typeface system reflects the platform's broader commitment to continuous growth and adaptation." The whole idea was to make something open enough to keep building on," Daniel stresses. "We've already got tools in place to generate new weights, shapes and animated variants, and the tool itself still has a ton of unused functionality. "I can see that growing as new content strands emerge; we'll keep adapting the type with them," he adds. "It's less about version numbers and more about ongoing movement. The system's alive; that's the point. A provocation for the industry In this context, the Frontify Futures identity represents more than smart visual branding; it's also a manifesto for how creative systems might evolve in an age of increasing automation and systematisation. By building unpredictability into their tools, embracing the tension between human craft and machine precision, and creating systems that grow and adapt rather than merely scale, Daniel and the Frontify team have created something that feels genuinely forward-looking. For creatives grappling with similar questions about the future of their craft, Frontify Futures offers both inspiration and practical demonstration. It shows how brands can remain human while embracing technological capability, how systems can be both consistent and surprising, and how the future itself can become a creative medium. This clever approach suggests that the future of branding lies not in choosing between human creativity and systematic efficiency but in finding new ways to make them work together, creating something neither could achieve alone.
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 0 önizleme
Arama Sonuçları
CGShares https://cgshares.com