Design/Mailer: Sub Slayers, #012

In addition to producing the Sub Slayers record label cover artwork I also design and build email HTML newsletters. This is the current one and coincides with the label’s 10th release.

SUBSLAYERSMAILER012 Design/Mailer: Sub Slayers, #012

Artwork: Sub Slayers #007 – #010

I’ve been a bit slack with posting the work I’ve been commissioned to produce as a freelance designer over the past few months. In an effort to amend that, here are the last 4 pieces of digital artwork I’ve produced for the record label Sub Slayers.

You can hear the music the artwork serves to illustrate and package at the music download store Trackitdown (amongst many others like Beatport or Junodownload for instance).

The source imagery used is a combination of my own photography often used as texture in the pieces together with creative commons licensed shots.

SUBSLAYERS007 500x500 Artwork: Sub Slayers #007   #010

SUBSLAYERS008 500x500 Artwork: Sub Slayers #007   #010

SUBSLAYERS009 500x500 Artwork: Sub Slayers #007   #010

SUBSLAYERS010 500x500 Artwork: Sub Slayers #007   #010

Obstaculum by Craig Hunter Parker

Just stunning. These are the work of Craig Hunter Parker and form his Obstaculum series; digitally enhanced photography showcasing the theme of ‘arcane glimpses of our real and surreal boundaries’.

The Hand of God 500x500 Obstaculum by Craig Hunter Parker Read More

No paint, all digital. The art of Noil Klune.

The work of Italian artist Noil Klune. The 11 images I’ve posted up here are taken from the TEATRO MAGICO series. Wonderfully textured and built digitally.
Innocente Evasione 500x500 No paint, all digital. The art of Noil Klune. Read More

the very colourful work of Jen Stark

Bright, vibrant and geometrically wonderful, these are the work of Jen Stark, an American artist. Make sure you check out her animations at the bottom of this post.

pedestal 500x649 the very colourful work of Jen Stark Read More

Artwork: Ostin – Delirium [enrmp276]

makemassair ostin delirium 1200x1200 2 500x500 Artwork: Ostin   Delirium [enrmp276]

This is some artwork I recently designed and produced for the prolific and diverse Portuguese netlabel Enough Records. A Russian artist, Ostin has a style of production that is dark downbeat IDM infused beats.
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The Fallen; a fashion film by Jason Ell

A great short film by Jason Ell, published by The Glass Magazine.

Everything you’d want from a promotional fashion piece; great sound, some great shots, interesting clothes and of course the model, in this particular case Julia Oleynik from Union Models. For me this is the right side of abstract, resulting in a watchable piece that is stylish and indeed a pleasure to watch.

Showcasing A/W collections from Louis Vuitton, Damir Doma, Marni,
Burberry Prorsum, Dsquared, Noel Stewart, Belmacz and others.
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Productivity, insightful advice

4546017269 ddac803025 z 500x340 Productivity, insightful advice

It won’t be a surprise to anyone who reads the posts here, or follows me on Twitter or even that knows me outside of the internet that I’m very interested in how things work and how people focus on those things. I seem to be forever making lists to deal with the work I should be doing, want to be doing and could be doing. This has varying degrees of success.

Zen Habits posted something recently on that very subject. Something that struck a cord with me and that I have on occasion worked that way. Thou I tend to more often that not continue to produce ‘to-do-later’ lists and not everything gets done.

Leo Babauta‘s blog Zen Habits is worth a look if any of this resonates with you.

Deal with something once. Do it now. Then it’s off your mind, and you can fully focus on the next matter.

Do most of us do this? We might read a bunch of emails, and say, “I’ll reply to those later. I’ll decide later.” We might see a bill or other piece of mail, and put it aside for later.

We put off small decisions and tasks for later, and they pile up, weighing on us at the back of our minds, pulling on us until we collapse under the weight of “later”.

Try dealing with it immediately.

If you open an email, make a decision on it immediately. Schedule the appointment in your calendar, reply, do a small task it requires, or if it takes too long, then you can put it on a to-do list — but avoid this if possible. David Allen suggests a two-minute rule: if the task can be done in less than two minutes, do it now. I suggest five minutes, even up to 10, as that means you have one less thing to worry about.

At any rate, archive the email once you’ve dealt with it, or delete it. You’re done with that. Move to the next, and repeat.

This applies to everything else: mail, paperwork, phone calls, requests from others. Deal with them immediately, or schedule a date to deal with it later if necessary.

When you are finished using something, put it away immediately and avoid a mess later. This is also how I keep clutter at bay. When you’re cooking, wash the items as you go to avoid a huge kitchen mess.

When your child asks for attention, give it to her now.

When your wife starts talking to you, put away the laptop, iPad or mobile device, and talk to her now.

What this means is that you deal with each thing in the moment, and then move to the next. Your mind isn’t pulled in a million directions at once.

It’s contrary to advice I’ve given before, because what it sometimes means is that you are often moving at the whim of other people’s requests — what they think is important, not you. And this can be a problem. You don’t want to just be reactive. I prefer to do what I think is important.

But a balance can be struck. When you deal with email or other types of communication, do it now. When you decide to work on something important, clear everything else, shut down communication, and just focus on that one important task. Don’t bounce around.

photograph by Mark Hunter

photographer Aneta Kowalczyk

Untitled 1 photographer Aneta Kowalczyk

The work of Polish photographer Aneta Kowalczyk. She has quite a bit of her work online; these are some of my favourite pieces from her portfolio.
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Marco Mazzoni and his wonderful coloured pencil drawings

Some beautiful pieces from the hand of Marco Mazzoni. If you visit his site, you can see these in a much larger and detailed size.

tumblr ljg9ewziQs1qeuyyqo1 500 Marco Mazzoni and his wonderful coloured pencil drawings
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