
Pantone has just announced that PANTONE® 15-5519 Turquoise is the Color of the Year for 2010. PANTONE® chose it for 'transports us to an exciting tropical paradise while offering a sense of protection and healing in stressful times’.
it's one of my favorite color coincidently. anyway, you get the point, Turquoise is the color of the year. now go paint your rooms and buy a new shirt...
Dec 11, 2009
Color of the Year for 2010
Nov 18, 2009
自主制作アニメ - フミコの告白
hahaha.. this is too great to share..
dialog something like: "I want you to go out with me." and he refuses by saying: "Sorry, I want to focus on baseball right now." "Blah blah, is stupid! *Grr grr, " *Running scene* End: "I'll make (soup?) for you every morning!" which is like a marrige proposal and then he says "Sorry, I want to focus on baseball right now."
Oct 21, 2009
Oct 2, 2009
Upload your tee design and sale immediately at MySoti
i've uploaded this old design for sale at MySoti. this is a place that where designers can upload original artwork and turn it into awesome, real-life products for sale that they print and ship out to customers worldwide for you no hassle! isn't that great? oh by the way, if you like this design, go get one will ya!
Sep 27, 2009
Sep 22, 2009
Olympus PEN E-P1, get one of this!
Not a Compact. Not an SLR... It's a PEN.
isn't so sweet of her... ^_^
i'm gona get one...
Sep 7, 2009
IKEA says goodbye to Futura
Blog from idsgn
After 50 years of the iconic Futura typeface, IKEA has made a switch to… Verdana?
The 2010 IKEA catalog, now arriving at doorsteps around the world, reveals the company’s choice to change all typography to the Microsoft font that every web designer has grown to hate. Verdana, specifically designed for on-screen readability, first shipped with Internet Explorer 3 in 1996. Being one of the better looking ‘Core fonts for the web’—a limited selection which also includes Arial, Comic Sans, and Times New Roman—Verdana has become one of the most widely used fonts on the web (but rarely ever used in print).
The font will replace IKEA Sans (a customized version of Futura by Robin Nicholas), and IKEA Serif (based on Century Schoolbook). In an interview with the Swedish design magazine Cap & Design, IKEA’s Ivana Hrdlickova says the main reason for the switch was to allow the company to use the same typeface in all countries (current IKEA typefaces do not contain Asian characters, for example). Being that Verdana was designed for the web, it also allows the company’s image to remain consistent online and in print.
The 2010 edition of the world’s third most printed publication (next to the Bible and Harry Potter), is now available online. For more on Futura, check out Know your type: Futura.

