
Women designers are out there, and it’s in everyone’s interest to recognize their work.

A designer takes the superfluous imagery off some familiar packaging and reveals what could be the next new trend in branding.

Designers in Chattanooga, Tennessee have distilled the city's burgeoning creative spirit into a typeface.

Designers from Pentagram have a smart solution for branding weed, should it become legal in California after next week's passage of Proposition 19.

Portland-based designer Max Erdenberger has created a brilliantly simple poster you can buy to aid efforts in Japan.

Senate candidate Pete Hoekstra's website used stereotypical imagery and fonts mimicking East Asian calligraphy

From the marquees of Hollywood to the bodegas of East L.A, we want to see the most beautiful and bizarre vintage signs that Los Angeles has to offer.

An increasing number of sports teams and networks are using augmented reality graphics only visible on TV.

First-Stop has a smart idea to cut down on all the unsolicited promotional pieces that creatives mail out.

Until this year's election, the two major political parties used eerily similar logos and names.

Print is dead. Or is it just sleeping?

The Society of News Design has named a Portuguese publication as the world's best-designed newspaper. Print has never been so alive.

Cleveland design festival Weapons of Mass Creation will be bigger, better, and more diverse than ever this year.

Lisa Rienermann's Type the Sky project uses the spaces between buildings to form the letters of the alphabet, from A to Z.

Using actual subway location data from New York City Transit, an artist animated the subway map, and lets you play it like a viola.

Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom had 18 luxury automobiles with license plates like "EVIL," "GOD," "GUILTY."