Latest news with #graphicDesign


South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- Lifestyle
- South China Morning Post
How to age well and stay happy in retirement? 67-year-old chooses active, exciting life
For Alfred Yu, retirement was the beginning of an active, purposeful life. Growing older had sparked new passions in him and retirement allowed the Hong Kong-based 67-year-old to explore new possibilities, develop different skills and share them freely with others. After a career running his own training centre focused on computer-aided design and graphic design, Yu's retirement in 2014 marked a turning point. With more free time and no financial pressures, and his only child becoming more independent at age 16, Yu had the opportunity to rediscover his own interests. 'Retirement doesn't mean resting. It means having the freedom to do what you love,' he said. Yu bikes in Yuen Long, Hong Kong, in 2022. Photo: courtesy of Alfred Yu He took up camping, cycling and running – activities he had never prioritised in his youth. 'I was never athletic, but I liked swimming. Running and biking were new challenges.'


Fast Company
7 days ago
- Entertainment
- Fast Company
‘The point is to get disoriented, not oriented': David Reinfurt on why it's time to rethink how we teach design
Designer, editor, and educator David Reinfurt's 2019 book, A *New* Program for Graphic Design (Inventory Press) was a surprise success, selling out its initial print run in three weeks. It's now in its third edition with translations in Chinese, French, German, Italian, Korean, and Spanish. The book was described as a 'do-it-yourself textbook,' but a traditional design textbook it was not. Across its three chapters—Typography, Gestalt, and Interface—Reinfurt draws on designers, printers, artists, and publishers to show that graphic design is not a narrow area of study but rather a broad way of looking at how we understand the world. The creation of the book, too, was as unusual as its contents. The three chapters were based on three courses Reinfurt had been teaching at Princeton University. To produce the book, Reinfurt presented all his lectures from all three courses to an audience at Inventory Press's studio in Los Angeles. Transcripts were produced from the three days that were then edited to form the book, making for a casual, dialogue-driven text that is at once personal, meandering, and expansive. Now, Reinfurt and Inventory Press are releasing a follow-up book, A *Co-* Program for Graphic Design, that is based on three of Reinfurt's new courses: Circulation, Multiplicity, and Research. Reinfurt taught these courses over Zoom, during the pandemic, and much like the first book, used the recordings from those sessions as the structure for the new book. Because of the limitations and opportunities of teaching over Zoom, A *Co-* Program introduces a series of new voices, guest lectures from each course, which further expand our understanding of what graphic design can be.