Doing business like this takes much more effort than doing your own business at home, and on top of that there's the curse of travelling, worries about making train connections, bad and irregular food, contact with different people all the time so that you...
This is the space where ideas go to stretch their legs before the heavy lifting of actual content arrives. It’s the digital equivalent of a "Coming Soon" sign, but with a bit more...
In a typical workflow, placeholder text helps determine how headlines interact with body copy, how columns align, and whether margins and gutters are appropriately sized. Designers often rely on this type of text...
This is the space where ideas go to stretch their legs before the heavy lifting of actual content arrives. It’s the digital equivalent of a "Coming Soon" sign, but with a bit more structural integrity...
This is the space where ideas go to stretch their legs before the heavy lifting of actual content arrives. It’s the digital equivalent of a "Coming Soon" sign, but with a bit more...
In a typical workflow, placeholder text helps determine how headlines interact with body copy, how columns align, and whether margins and gutters are appropriately sized. Designers often rely on this type of text...
Tin Pan Alley in early 20th-century New York and Laurel Canyon in 1960s Los Angeles were influential songwriting communities that practiced a form of musical journalism, capturing their eras through song. Despite differences in geography and decades, both transformed current events into music that sounded alarms with their generations.Tin Pan Alley—named for the tinny sound of numerous $100 used Gulbransen pianos on Manhattan’s West 28th Street—was America’s commercial music center from the late 1800s through the 1920s.
In cramped offices, formally dressed songwriters in suits, ties, and bowler hats worked at upright pianos. These musical journalists chronicled current events with melody and verse, ultimately producing sheet music for Americans...
This is the space where ideas go to stretch their legs before the heavy lifting of actual content arrives. It’s the digital equivalent of a "Coming Soon" sign, but with a bit more...
Doing business like this takes much more effort than doing your own business at home, and on top of that there's the curse of travelling, worries about making train connections, bad and irregular...