We Are Nashville!

Posted by amanda | Posted in art, artist's community, design | Posted on 06-05-2010

Tagged Under : , ,

This past weekend, my city was hit with 16″ of rain, flooding our streets and stealing homes, businesses and livelihoods. The following article was written by my friend, Patten Fuqua and featured on Section303.com, a Nashville Predators hockey blog. I couldn’t have expressed it better myself:

What I am about to write has absolutely nothing to do with hockey.

If you live outside of Nashville, you may not be aware, but our city was hit by a 500-year flood over the last few days. The national news coverage gave us 15 minutes, but went back to focusing on a failed car bomb and an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. While both are clearly important stories, was that any reason to ignore our story? It may not be as terror-sexy as a failed car bomb or as eco-sexy as an oil spill, but that’s no reason to be ignored.

The Cumberland River crested at its highest level in over 80 years. Nashville had its highest rainfall totals since records began. People drowned. Billions of dollars in damage occurred. It is the single largest disaster to hit Middle Tennessee since the Civil War. And yet…no one knows about it.

Does it really matter? Eventually, it will…as I mentioned, there are billions of dollars in damage. It seems bizarre that no one seems to be aware that we just experienced what is quite possibly the costliest non-hurricane disaster in American history. The funds to rebuild will have to come from somewhere, which is why people need to know. It’s hard to believe that we will receive much relief if there isn’t a perception that we need it.

But let’s look at the other side of the coin for a moment. A large part of the reason that we are being ignored is because of who we are. Think about that for just a second. Did you hear about looting? Did you hear about crime sprees? No…you didn’t. You heard about people pulling their neighbors off of rooftops. You saw a group of people trying to move two horses to higher ground. No…we didn’t loot. Our biggest warning was, “Don’t play in the floodwater.” When you think about it…that speaks a lot for our city. A large portion of why we were being ignored was that we weren’t doing anything to draw attention to ourselves. We were handling it on our own.

Some will be quick to find fault in the way rescue operations were handled, but the fact of the matter is that the catastrophe could not have been prevented and it is simply ignorant beyond all reason to suggest otherwise. It is a flood. It was caused by rain. You can try to find a face to stick this tragedy to, but you’ll be wrong.

Parts of Nashville that could never even conceivably be underwater were underwater. Some of them still are. Opry Mills and the Opryland Hotel are, for all intents and purposes, destroyed. People died sitting in standstill traffic on the Interstate. We saw boats going down West End. And, of course, we all saw the surreal image of the portable building from Lighthouse Christian floating into traffic and being destroyed when cars were knocked into it. I’m still having trouble comprehending all of it.

And yet…life will go on. We’ll go back to work, to school, to our lives…and we’ll carry on. In a little over a month, I’ll be on this website talking about the draft. In October, we’ll be discussing the new Predators’ season with nary a thought of these past few days. But in a way, they changed everyone in this town. We now know that that it can happen to us…but also know that we can handle it.

Because we are Nashville.

As an artist and citizen of Nashville, my heart beats for this community. In addition to donating my time and resources to clean-up efforts, I wanted to do something to document this event as well as give back. Patten and I partnered with other members of the community and created this t-shirt design. Proceeds will benefit the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee. For more updates, please visit the We Are Nashville Facebook page.

Easter Goodies

Posted by amanda | Posted in design, resources | Posted on 11-04-2009

easter

Happy Easter from ArtisticAmanda.com! Consider this your virtual easter basket filled with lots of Photoshop goodies!

  • Stitched Bunny Brushes from BestPhotoshopTutorials.net
  • Easter Egg brushes from Seishido
  • More Easter Egg Brushes from EasyElements.com
  • Brushes of Easter Bunnies, Eggs & Chicks from BestDesignOptions.com
  • Funny Bunny Brushes by the Green Bulb Gang
  • Easter Background Download: 2400×2400 pix (8×8 inch, 300 dpi) by the Green Bulb Gang
  • Holy Typography, Batman.

    Posted by amanda | Posted in design, resources | Posted on 02-02-2009

    “Typography, the art of manipulating type to enhance communication, goes hand-in-hand with graphic design. It sets the mood. Establishes the pace. Evokes the feeling. Ensures readability. It’s part of that indescribable “something” that makes a document work.” -Designer’s Typography, 2009.

    ilovetype1

    I first began dabbling in web design back in the early 90s, during the prime of Geocities and Angelfire. “Hey, look mom! I made it so the pictures will change when you wave your mouse over them!” Yeah, I really thought I was hot stuff.

    Being a self-taught designer, I learned a lot over the years partly by natural curiosity (thanks for the internet, Al Gore!), but mostly by trial-and-error. Since my foundation was in web design, making the transition to print was a little rocky. (I attempted to design my very first print ad in Macromedia Fireworks. /headdesk) If I didn’t understand resolution, you can bet I didn’t know a thing about tracking, kerning or typography back then. Thankfully, I’m a quick learner.

    To bring you up to speed, typography is more than just a pretty font. It’s the study of type and typefaces – the evolution of printed letters. Since man did not begin to write with type, but rather the chisel, brush, and pen, it’s the study of handwriting that provides us with the basis of creating type designs. In fact, several of the fonts we see on our computers have evolved from the work of typefounders of the 15th and early 16th centuries. (Claude Garamond, William Caslon… sound familiar?)

    Typography has one plain duty before it and that is to convey information in writing. ” -Emil Ruder (1914-1970), co-founder of the International Center for the Typographic Arts in New York, 1962

    Below are a few of my favorite displays of creative typography… what are some of your favorites?

    By Craig Ward of Words Are Pictures

    By Craig Ward of Words Are Pictures

    By MIAD Communication Design

    By MIAD Communication Design

    screenshot of acsys interactive

    screenshot of the acsys interactive website.

    Duk Nguyen

    Duk Nguyen

    More great found type photos by Greg Meadows: Take a walk through The Boneyard.

    The Journal of Urban Typography:  dedicated to the documentation and study of signs, word fragments, and typography created with utilitarian intent in urban environments.

    RESOURCES:

    FREE FONT SITES:

    *I Love Typography scrabble graphic designed by Hamish.