Bonne Chance

A collection of art, design, illustration, typography, photography, ephemera, ideas, videos, music, quotes, internet memes, & general curiosities.

Feb 6

The Wolf I Used To Be is a beautiful paper-crafted short film about a wolf who takes an office job. Created by a production studio called Nearly Normal out of London. Via Yewknee.


Apr 14
56 sleeps — it may be too soon to start counting down our trip to San Francisco but seeing these posters on hrrrthrrr’s tumblr today got me very excited!

Artist Chloe  Fleury melds her love for paper and San Francisco into one bright  and punchy project: The Place I Live. Each “poster” is made entirely of  paper and represents her favorite things about the various areas of her  hometown.
Next on her list? NYC!

56 sleeps — it may be too soon to start counting down our trip to San Francisco but seeing these posters on hrrrthrrr’s tumblr today got me very excited!

Artist Chloe Fleury melds her love for paper and San Francisco into one bright and punchy project: The Place I Live. Each “poster” is made entirely of paper and represents her favorite things about the various areas of her hometown.

Next on her list? NYC!


Nov 10
Typographic specimen from a Bauhaus exhibition, featuring works from 1913-1933. Designer unknown. Via but does it float.
“This exhibition brings together over 400 works by some 100 teachers and students of the Bauhaus that reflect the extraordinarily broad range of the school’s output, including architecture, ceramics, costume design, furniture, graphic design, industrial design, painting, photography, sculpture, and textiles. A selection of these works are represented on this website, along with a historical overview of the school, its workshops, and faculty.” —Bauhaus 1919 – 1933: Workshops for Modernity, through January 25, 2010 at Moma

Typographic specimen from a Bauhaus exhibition, featuring works from 1913-1933. Designer unknown.
Via but does it float.

“This exhibition brings together over 400 works by some 100 teachers and students of the Bauhaus that reflect the extraordinarily broad range of the school’s output, including architecture, ceramics, costume design, furniture, graphic design, industrial design, painting, photography, sculpture, and textiles. A selection of these works are represented on this website, along with a historical overview of the school, its workshops, and faculty.” —Bauhaus 1919 – 1933: Workshops for Modernity, through January 25, 2010 at Moma


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