Guynamedtopher is a graphic designer living in BROOKLYN NY.
I see like a designer and make plans with hope for future change; I'm building social entrepreneurship on my experience as a graphic designer, and I plan to join the conversation on proactively sustainable social and environmental development.guynamedtopher’s website:
http://www.cawportfolio.com
Polaroid is back! The Impossible Project is solved! Fantastic news!
charity:water is doing a great job with really strong design, events, and new media presence (twitter, etc). They also launched a new site mycharitywater.com that allows people to set up their own giving campaigns in an online community.
definitely don’t get the trips by food… and I also don’t see much of a correlation going in the data
Polaroid is back! The Impossible Project is solved! Fantastic news!
charity:water is doing a great job with really strong design, events, and new media presence (twitter, etc). They also launched a new site mycharitywater.com that allows people to set up their own giving campaigns in an online community.
Excited to read through the rest of these and see new ones as they continue to come out…
4 x 10: yes please! although the best jobs are the ones that you stay 10 hrs. a day for anyways…
haha @city_painter, I completely agree! I only dream of one day affording a HUGE 900 sqft apartment in NYC.Most Americans could learn a great deal about paring down & living small–Glad to hear the discussion about living small continuing in areas where housing size is not as constrained by budget.
I love how snarky this is! It’s like someone from NYmag transferred over to GOOD!
I’m very impressed with the final house and the concept of a high-density alternative to suburban sprawl–would love to live there myself–but I question how much this is a “re-fabrication” of the existing trailer, since it was stripped down to the chassis and a significant portion of the trailer was still sent to landfill. Very strong architectural concept, nonetheless.
I’m amazed by the amount of hoarding taking place in some of these
pictures. Luxury really is more in the freedom of selection and not
accumulation.
I’m amazed by the amount of hoarding taking place in some of these pictures. I live in a 200sqft apartment, myself, and it’s hard to imagine trying to store so much stuff. Luxury really is more in the freedom of selection and not accumulation.
definitely don’t get the trips by food… and I also don’t see much of a correlation going in the data