How Henri Matisse Scandalized the Art Establishment with His Daring Use of Color
Colour palettes have become a content commodity of sorts – shared widely on X, with some platforms entirely dedicated to accidental combinations. Where has this hex code fascination come from? And what does it say about our impulse to catalogue?
There are several common lines of inquiry when someone learns you’re vegan. These scripted responses will spare everyone a tedious conversation and...
Grateful Dead Nights Are Taking Over MLB. Here's How That Happened
Grateful Dead Nights Are Taking Over MLB. Here’s How That Happened
Different weights are cool, but the real question is whether your font can swash.
80/20 guide on how to make your blog posts look pretty, for free.
Seems like we're always talking about clipping text around here. All it takes is a little browsing to spot a bunch of things we've already explored.
Gargoyles, griffins, and graphic design – welcome to blackletter summer.
In this dynamic Mushroom Color Atlas, explore the colorful universe of fungi through the spectrum of colors from dyeing with mushrooms.
How I used my own Rust tool to ship 175 quality pixel fonts.
The Paige Compositor is an ASME landmark. First US typography machine to set, justify, and distribute foundry type from a common case using one operator.
Read the article before you comment. No one needs your ignorant comments.
More than half of the world's oceans surface waters have changed colour over the past two decades.
This post came up following a conversation I had with Emilio Cobos — a senior developer at Mozilla and member of the CSSWG — about the last CSSWG group
There is an audio segment and transcript.
I've always wanted to understand color theory, so I started reading about the XYZ color space which looked like it was the mother of all color spaces. I had no idea what that meant, but it was created in 1931 so studying 93-year old research seemed like a good place to start.
Wow. How old are you?
You think that a majority of humans are dumber than most humans, which says about as much as I think I need to know about your critical thinking skills.
My defense (defense of what?) was not "butbut there are a lot of them!" (why did you use "there are" and then "there is" in subsequent sentences?). Rather than defending anything, I was pointing out how you wrote something stupid. The larger the group you are talking about, the less precise you can be and the less likely what you are saying is accurate. You managed to choose one of the largest targets you possibly could demographically and wrote a sweeping generalization which is just stupid. I don't have to defend anything: you have to defend writing something so stupid and you can't because it's just stupid. You write stupid things.
And mobile is by far the majority of page views on the web
Really? Do you have a citation for this?
There are billions of Christians. This is stupid.
"They"?
That's correct: if you wanted an NC exclusion, I would upload it to the NCCommons, but it would not be used on Wikipedia, etc. Whatever you chose to do is obviously 100% legit, no pressure. You may want to consider how having a photo out there on Wikipedia could be marketing for you as well.
I love this. Would you be willing to license the photo CC BY 4.0 so I could upload it to the Wikimedia Commons? (See https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/COMM:LICENSE)
If you didn't read it, then don't comment. The Internet does not need more ignorant takes.
I thought it was pretty obvious, since there is so little actual content in the post, but I guess you're right. Thanks.
It makes two claims and he did commit suicide. Also, my keyboard is broken. :/
Please don’t spread misinformation.
Edit: Why is anyone downvoting this? The text is inaccurate and should not be posted.
No one said that it is all like that, but enough of /b/ is so gross as to taint the reputation of the entire site. Allowing some of the stuff that is on there is enough guilt by association, even if some of the other boards have better discourse.