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About the Author
Steven Heller is the cofounder and the cochair of the MFA Designer as Author program at the School of Visual Arts. He writes the Visuals column for the New York Times Book Review and the Graphic Content blog for T-Style; is editor of AIGA Voice; and is a contributor to Design Observer. He is the author, coauthor, and/or editor of more than 120 books on design and popular culture, including the forthcoming Born Modern: The Life and Design of Alvin Lustig (Chronicle Books). More information can be found at his homepage.
 
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Print Ain't Dead Yet (Continued)

by Steven Heller
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What happens if you cross the paper-technology of Esopus with the typographic quirkiness of the now defunct Nest?  The offspring might be the bi-annual Vintage Magazine. Inspired by Fleur Cowles' Flair (1950-51), the second issue of Vintage (out now) is an eclectic mix of graphic, printing and written elements. The cover is embossed (letterpress style) with an open spine bound with a ribbon and the interior is filled with an array of special paper effects (pop-ups, booklets, and even an air sickness bag containing  a booklet devoted to shopping bags).

The creation of editor and publisher Ivy Baer Sherman, the limited-run second issue, devoted to the “historic impact of art, music, fashion and food,” “riffs” on an ode by Gary Giddens to the manual typewriter. The cover “celebrates the tossed-away drafts of pre-digital writing by opening up to a poem printed on a piece of hand-crumpled paper.”

Typographically awkward with its share of way too many clunky and legibly-challenged layouts, Vintage nonetheless is curiously engaging in terms of its tactility. For me it represents the end-of-print era magazine, where spectacle is the means to trigger interest in the text. I was particularly interested in Kate Winick’s article on New York’s storied Carlyle Hotel, and the unusual article on Laurent Grimod de la Reyniere (1758-1837), the first “public food critic.” While the magazine doesn’t hold together as a total entity, the individual parts have a certain flair.

Vintage is $20 per issue, and worth collecting, not just to read and view, but as an example of this “Ain’t Dead Yet” period.

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The Play issue, from NBA branding to Lego urbanism. On the cover: Symphonic Band—Univ. S. Illinois / 1965, by Paul Octavious, from the series “Grandpa’s Records.” Octavious says: “My Grandpa Jud used to play records for me all the time as a kid... Read More
 
 
 
 
June 2011
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