Monday, August 3, 2020

This Restaurant Is Winning The Funny Sign Game (90 New Pics)

A restaurant in Texas has made itself a household name by putting up hilarious signs again and again, day after day, year after year. The Austin-based establishment named El Arroyo has had its sign board since its opening in 1975, and 45 years later, it’s still out there cracking everyone up.

Paige Winstanley, co-owner of the restaurant, says about their signs: “In these times when much is unknown, El Arroyo finds comfort in bringing smiles and laughter to our community on a daily basis.” With 284K Instagram followers, the restaurant is surely doing everyone who’s rolling through 2020 one heck of a service.

So let’s take a look at the new favorites down below, and after you’re done, check out part 1 and part 2. If you suddenly feel inspired, hit them up with a smashing sign idea via sign@elarroyo.com and you may well become a part of El Arroyo’s humorous legacy.

More info: ElArroyo.com | Instagram Twitter

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Imagine putting up one fresh sign every day for the past forty years or so. It’s no surprise that with such a sea of witty puns and smashing one-liners, some are just bound to anger people.

That’s precisely what happened back in 2005 when one of El Arroyo’s signs revealed a plot twist in the movie Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. But the employees of the restaurant aren’t afraid to fire up some controversy with their quips like “NFL Slogan: Why have integrity when you can have ratings?”

Austin Monthly magazine has also suggested that their sometimes bold remarks were the reason why someone tried to burn the restaurant down in 1998.

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According to El Arroyo’s official statement, “over the years, we've covered every food pun imaginable while never forgetting witty commentary on current events, but the face(s) behind the daily marquee messages remains a secret for now.”

Maybe not quite a big one, since these days, most sign puns are submitted by fans online and you can try your luck and wit too!

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Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's former London home

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London

Architecture studio Morris + Company has designed an extension for the self-built home of Walter Segal in north London that is "a direct homage" to the architect's body of work.

Located in Highgate, London, Segal built North Hill House for himself and his family in 1964.

The London-based architecture studio will renovate and extend the home in a way that aims to respect the work of the original architect, who is best known for developing a system of prefabricated, timber-framed housing in the 1960s and 70s.

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London
Morris + Company has proposed extending Walter Segal's former home in Highgate

"We explored Segal's self build legacy, his approach and ambition, through documentaries in his work, our own site investigations and via texts written by Segal and others on his works," explained Morris + Company founder Joe Morris.

"The scheme has been directly influenced by this research," he told Dezeen. "Whilst it is true that the client will not themselves build their house, the way we envisage its fabrication and assembly is in homage to the self-build principles."

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London
A front extension would be added to the house

To align with Segal's principles, the extension will be built largely from timber using a series of repeated elements, although it will not use modular construction.

"The project adopts a low specification, dry assembly, prefabrication philosophy as a direct homage to Segal's oeuvre," said Morris.

"Our vision is that the design and detail liberates the build process from excessive site-based activity, without resorting to cost-prohibitive modular construction, which makes little sense for a project of this scale," he continued.

"Instead, readily available, highly sustainable materials – predominantly timber – will be pre-engineered for high-controlled site assembly, without the need for heavy machinery."

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London
A large rear extension would be offset from the original house

Overall, the rear and front extension will double the size of the home, taking it from 166 square metres to 300 square metres.

At the front of the property, the existing access route will be reworked, while a large two-storey rear extension will be built in the garden.

The extensions will form a zigzagged route through the building.

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London
Morris + Company aim to create a zigzag route through the home

"The original building was economic, simple, elegantly laid out, practical and functional," Morris told Dezeen. "However, much of the fabric of the original was removed and replaced over a sequence of renovations and adaptations."

"Our extension is driven largely by Segal's memory, and indeed the form and composition of the interiors, as a zigzag sequence of interconnected rooms, which has influenced the tectonic composition of the new addition," he continued.

Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's home in Highgate, London
The timber extension would be clad in vertical timber battens

The rear extension, which will be clad in vertical timber battens, will be deliberately offset from the original house so that the rear facade of Segal's home will still be visible from the garden.

"Over time, Segal's own house has been altered, and an adjacent plot infilled obscuring the original from the street," said Morris. "The rear remains largely open but hidden to many apart from a handful of neighbouring properties," he continued.

"That aside, the project performs many structural and compositional gymnastics to set down and away, allowing the rear facade to be as legible as possible."

In 2017 a plan to extend Segal's house was proposed by Jonathan Tuckey Design with an addition like an "overgrown ruin", while Turner Prize-winning collective Assemble designed a shed for the garden. These proposals were drawn up for the previous owners of the house, but were never carried out.


Project credits:

Architect: Morris + Company
Structural engineer: Simple Works
Heritage consultants: Museum of London Archaeology
Arboricultural consultant: PJC Consultancy
Advisor to principal: Pick Everard
Designer visualisations: Darc Studio
Model maker: William Guthrie
Model photographer: Jack Hobhouse

The post Morris + Company to extend Walter Segal's former London home appeared first on Dezeen.



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This Artist Colorizes Old Photos And They Might Change The Way You See History (30 Pics)

Mads Madsen is a 25-year-old Danish man who is fascinated by history and is even pursuing a Master’s degree in ancient Greece and Rome history. The man also has an interesting hobby that’s just perfect for a history-obsessed man like himself – colorizing old photos.

Mads has been doing colorizations for years and in a recent interview with Bored Panda said he got into it after coming across some colorized photos on Reddit. “They were colorized by hand. This discovery led me to a more in-depth search, and I learned that it was actually done by an old lady,” said the man. “She had a website dedicated to hand-coloring photographs of all periods with oil. It just absolutely blew me away.”

More info: Facebook

#1 Desmond Doss, Conscientious Objector And Medal Of Honor Recipient. He Was Given The Medal Of Honor For His Actions At Hawksaw Ridge, During The Battle Of Okinawa, Where He Carried 75 Wounded Men To Safety Under Heavy Enemy Fire

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#2 Two American Soldiers Proudly Show Off Their Personalized “Easter Eggs” (155mm Artillery Shells) Before Firing Them

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

When choosing photos for his colorizations, Mads always checks whether the subject’s eyes will look good in the final picture. “I’ve always had a fascination with beautiful eyes, and that’s how I pick most of my photographs,” said the man. “If you look through my gallery, you’ll see that most of the eyes there are steely-blue or sky-blue, and they (hopefully) are framed beautifully by the surrounding color, contrasting with it really nicely. So that’s the main criteria.”

#3 Frederick Douglass, Talented Orator And Frontspokesman Of Abolition. Escaped Slavery, And Led A Freedom-Movement

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#4 Amelia Earhart, Unknown Date

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

Mads says that colorizing an old photo is no easy task and is especially difficult when it comes to overlapping objects like tree branches stretching into the sky. Since he doesn’t want the sky to look brown or the branches to look blue, he has to do everything by hand.

If you’d like to try your hand at colorization, Mads has prepared a useful video tutorial – you can check it out here!

#5 Nikola Tesla, With Roger Boskovich’s Book ‘Theoria Philosophiae Naturalis’, In Front Of The Spiral Coil Of His High-Frequency Transformer At East Houston St., New York

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#6 Sir David Attenborough, Born This Day In 1926, Seen Here Petting A Macaw Around 1950-51

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#7 Helen Keller Greeting Charlie Chaplin By Feeling His Features

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#8 Alan Turing – A Computer Scientist, Philosopher, And Cryptologist Who Played A Crucial Role In Breaking The Nazis’ Enigma Code – Seen Here In Happier Times. Unknown Date.

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#9 Native American Chief With Feathers, Unknown Date

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#10 Two Girls And Their Snow Fort, Ca. 1910

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#11 Sgt. Henry ‘Black Death’ Johnson Of The 369th

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

‘Harlem Hellfighters’ poses wearing the Croix du Guerre, awarded for bravery in an outnumbered battle against German forces. He also received the Medal of Honor posthumously in 2015 – 12th of February 1919

#12 Ca. 1960 – A Civil Rights Demonstration. A Black Woman Is Glaring At A Man, Who Appears To Be A Segregationist, Donning The Confederate Flag On His Hardhat

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#13 Audrey Hepburn. Unknown Date

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#14 Christmas Truce Of 1914 During The First World War

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

German and British soldiers laid down their arms, and climbed out in to no man’s land for an unofficial ceasefire during Christmas. Supposedly over 100,000 soldiers participated, gifts were exchanged, British soldiers cut the hair of German soldiers, officers swapped buttons and coats, privates exchanged candy – and the next day, the fighting resumed, and the carnage continued.

it’s worth noting that not all parts of the front celebrated this truce, some parts of the frontline only had small agreements of a minor ceasefire to recover bodies, while others sang songs from within their trenches.

#15 Albert Einstein, Photographed Ca. 1948 By Yousuf Karsh

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#16 Jim Henson, Creator Of The Muppets, Sitting With Ernie & Kermit The Frog

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#17 Marilyn Monroe After A Party. A Rare, Solemn Moment Of Quiet For The Otherwise Boisterous Personality

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#18 Richard Pierce – 14 Years Of Age, Works As A Western Union Telegraph Messenger. With Nine Months Of Service. He Works From 7 A.m. To 6 P.m. Smokes. Visits Houses Of Prostitution. Wilmington, Delaware, Ca. May 1910

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#19 Einstein Laughing During A Dinner Party, Year Unknown

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#20 Paul Newman & Clint Eastwood

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#21 Brigadier General And Actor Jimmy Stewart. Participated In Over 20 Missions Over Nazi-Occupied Europe, And Even Flew A Bombing Run During The Vietnam War.

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#22 James Dean, Actor And Rebel Without A Cause, December 29th, 1954

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#23 Victor Hugo, Famous Author Of Les Miserables, And The Hunchback Of Notre-Dame – Ca. 1876

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#24 Mark Twain

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

#25 Eric Arthur Blair, Better Known By His Pen Name George Orwell, Was An English Novelist, Essayist, Journalist, And Critic

Image source: MadsMadsen.CH

His work is marked by lucid prose, awareness of social injustice, opposition to totalitarianism, and outspoken support of democratic socialism.

Orwell wrote literary criticism, poetry, fiction, and polemical journalism. He is best known for the allegorical novella Animal Farm (1945) and the dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949). His non-fiction works, including The Road to Wigan Pier (1937), documenting his experience of working class life in the north of England, and Homage to Catalonia (1938), an account of his experiences in the Spanish Civil War, are widely acclaimed, as are his essays on politics, literature, language, and culture. In 2008, The Times ranked him second on a list of “The 50 greatest British writers since 1945”.

Orwell’s work continues to influence popular and political culture, and the term Orwellian – descriptive of totalitarian or authoritarian social practices – has entered the language together with many of his neologisms, including Big Brother, Thought Police, Room 101, memory hole, newspeak, doublethink, proles, unperson, and thoughtcrime.

#26 Joseph Goebbels Scowling At Photographer Albert Eisenstaedt After Finding Out Eisenstaedt Was Jewish.

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

Eisenstaedt himself is quoted as saying ‘He stared at me with hate in his eyes’, despite the events following up to this. Eisenstaedt had photographed Goebbels sitting on his own outside in the courtyard, had approached him and taken a photograph of him with a warm smile, and then moments later was confronted with this, when Goebbels had learned of Eisenstaedts ‘true identity’. Sad.

#27 Buzz Aldrin, The Second Man On The Moon, Seen Here As Commandant Of The Air Force Test Pilot School, Ca. 1963

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

Note the Mickey Mouse watch he is wearing as well.

#28 Theodore Roosevelt Holding His Grandson, Kermit Roosevelt Jr. – Ca. 1916

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#29 Abraham Lincoln And George Mcclellan At Antietam, October 2nd/3rd, 1862

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

#30 Charlie Chaplin Without His Trademark Moustache In His Later Years, Working On A Movie Set

Image source: madsmadsen.ch

The post This Artist Colorizes Old Photos And They Might Change The Way You See History (30 Pics) appeared first on DeMilked.



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The identity for an arts start-up aims to “empower” young voices

Studio BennĂ¼ has created a visual identity for social enterprise Critics’ Club, which looks to appeal to the organisation’s young audience and “welcome them into the world of art”.

The design work includes a visual identity and logo, as well as assets for social media campaigns on Instagram. There is also branded stationery.

According to the Critics’ Club’s website, the organisation exists to “shake up the people and voices that have access to, and are valued within, our cultural spaces”. These cultural worlds – which are “overwhelmingly white and middle class” – are sometimes inaccessible to less diverse groups of people, with barriers such as financial cost and a lack of representation. Critics’ Club links up with schools on eight-week programmes, where it takes a group of young people on cultural trips and gets them to write reviews about art and plays.


“Breaking into a new world”

Studio BennĂ¼ founder Tom Berry tells Design Week that he was inspired by the passion of the organisation’s founder Yasmin Ibison. She was ready to take the brand to “the next level”, he says. They had to appeal to a variety of stakeholders from parents to teachers. The main focus was to make arts and cultural spaces seem “cool and exciting” to students and to “empower” their voices.

While providing a blank canvas for the identity, Ibison did want to retain the name. Berry says that the logo, which incorporates the organisation’s name, is the heart of the branding and what ties the identity together.

Two Cs are taken from Critics’ Club and placed diagonally within a circular lock-up. Berry says that the gap between the letters represents a “broken link in a chain” because the organisation encourages young people to “break into a new world of art and culture”. In this way, the logo is suggestive of breaking old barriers and empowering new voices.


Design details

The organisation has six guiding values all beginning with the letter C – such as Connection and Curiosity – and these have been used in various logo applications. A circle comprising the six values interlocks the two Cs on logo variations, and these can be be used as part of the identity.

Termina has been used as the primary typeface for headings. This has been chosen for its “bold” quality, Berry says. There was also a “journey” around the colour choice, the designer explains. Starting from an orange that was deemed “too dark”, a red and yellow pairing emerged. A blue was added to the palette in an attempt to create a “bright” colourway.

The art world was one of the primary inspirations for the identity. Throughout the identity, there is a nod to 20th century Dutch painter Piet Mondrian, famed for his geometric red, yellow and blue paintings. There is also a retro undertone to the identity, which Berry says was the result of a sometimes-nostalgic design process. As it had to appeal to a range of ages, Berry thought back to what branding appealed to him as a teenager.

Famous paintings – such as Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa and Vincent van Gogh’s self-portrait – have also been used for campaign visuals. These have been written over with phrases like ‘What is art’ and ‘Is this art’ as a way to encourage participation in the youthful demographic.

The London-based studio also created templates for social media. These incorporate quotations from the young critics, as a way to create a platform for their words. New stationery has also been created for the brand, including pencils and branded paper.

The post The identity for an arts start-up aims to “empower” young voices appeared first on Design Week.



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IOC designs Solari workstation in collaboration with Gensler

Dezeen Showroom: trestle legs and a customisable, J-shaped privacy screen distinguish the Solari desk system, developed by Italian office...