It’s the end of August, and as such I’m back with the second installment of my pet obsession, the monthly roundup of various pixel-art products, designs, and various curiosities I’ve found online. While being a relatively minor part of the design world, I’ve made no secret before of my love for the artform, and every single day designers continue to do incredible things with it. We’ve got some high-profile pieces this month, plus a couple of websites and interactive games that are nothing short of brilliant.
First off, those legendary Germans eboy have published a new, extremely-limited-edition book, entitled Schmock. Published as part of a 500-copies-only series by Rojos, this little 160-pager is full of the studio’s recent work, most of which is pixel-centered, with some toy and t-shirt design thrown in too. Eboy are widely acknowledged as masters of the form: check out the prices on their first amazing book, long out of print, and glance at any of their insanely overloaded city posters to confirm as much. At the time of writing, there was one copy left, so it’s likely flown away to the land of overpriced amazon/ebay sellers by now. Console yourself with a t-shirt instead.
The high profile release I mentioned earlier is nothing other than Brian Eno and David Byrne’s new Everything That Happens Will Happen Today album. Released only through their website, the cover is an incredibly detailed drawing of a suburban house. They’re shipping out deluxe editions of the disc by November–if my dreams come true, the pixel theme will be expanded to glorious lengths for that version. Oh yeah, and the music: these are two giants of the last 40 years, and their one previous collaboration together, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, is fantastic. Expecting wonderful things from this one.
This is just beautiful–a Berlin-based designer created mockups in photoshop in order to figure out how to best tile his bathroom. His lively chronicle of the debate between he and his wife over what masterpiece of art they’d turn into a pixelated, tile-based bathroom wall & bathtub is both charming and enlightening–and just wait until you see their final choice for the tub. It’s absolutely genius. This is probably the best implementation of the 1×1 decorating aesthetic I’ve ever seen.
Here’s a flash game with an artistic bent–abstract pixels float around the screen, and only by moving your mouse to form the design can you move to the next level. To describe it sounds strange, but give it a try and you’ll find there’s something good about it–it’s like trying to pull one hundred pieces of floating confetti out of the air and into a unified whole. Did that make it any clearer? Nah, probably not. You’ll see it when you see it.
Another elegant flash work that uses only 1×1 pixels of different colour–mixed with some fun physics–to create piles of sand at the bottom of your browser. This falls into the “2-minute-diversions” category, but there’s nothing wrong with that.
And our last entry comes from Cubescape, a site that let you build an isometric world using a series of cubes. The most satisfying element for me is the option to “replay the construction” afterwards, which does exactly that: gives you a fast-moving animation of every block you (or other, more talented people) have dropped into place. Strangely gratifying. And with that, my roundup of one small corner of the design world is complete for another month–see you in September!