Gallery: For Something Simple, Minimal Design Sure Is Complicated
Stuart Tolley0175-MIN.jpg
*MIN: The New Simplicity in Graphic Design* is all about the inventive, expressive ways designers today are using understated graphics. For L’eaundry, a fancy laundry detergent sold from a food cooperative in Hamburg, Korefe design agency used a black-and-white silhouette design to show that this soap is as luxurious as perfume.
Stuart Tolley0234b-MIN.jpg
Riposte is a women's magazine out of London. The cover design is unusual: it only features type, with a photograph of the "cover girl" on the back page. In the book, Shaz Madani, the art director, explains: "The type-only cover reflects our desire to make sure the women featured are not judged or represented by just their looks, but instead celebrated for their ideas and achievements. It was a purposeful departure from the image-obsessed magazine world. So its minimal design is more functional than aesthetic, but has become an important part of our visual identity."
Stuart Tolley0358a-MIN.jpg
Plenty of the work in the book feels like an antidote to some of the hyper, extreme designs we've become used to. The Gentlewoman, a beautiful magazine that launched in 2010, could be seen as a reaction to the exclamatory neon layouts found in other women’s periodicals like *Cosmopolitan* or Glamour.
Stuart Tolley04MouseGraphics.jpg
Harmonian is a line of food products from Athens, Greece, that come in stark, all-white packaging by the firm Mousegraphics. Cut-outs let consumers see the actual food, letting the product sell itself.
Stuart Tolley05CW-Orange.jpg
For the 50th anniversary of the publication of A Clockwork Orange, Penguin commissioned Jonathan Barnbrook to reimagine David Pelham's famous cover, featuring a cartoon of a man with a mechanical gear for an eye. Barnbrook put a big orange circle on a white book jacket. It's easy to look at the cover, Tolley says, and criticize it for not being anything more complex than a circle. "If you were given a brief to redesign A Clockwork Orange, the amount of visual references, and the really famous book design that’s been done already---it’s almost an impossible brief," says Stuart Tolley, author of *MIN*. In this case, simplicity isn't a cop out; it's a high-stakes bet that one orange circle can be the face of an entire novel.
Stuart Tolley0670-MIN.jpg
Continuous Tone is a new sound project by London-based creative group Open Editions. These are compositions of environmental sounds recorded in the French countryside.
Stuart Tolley0790b-MIN.jpg
*New Philosopher* is an independent quarterly magazine from Australia. It covers relatively abstract topics, like the mind, the self, health, growth or happiness. The geometric covers help to illustrate those ideas specifically, but in a way that could be understood across cultures.
Stuart Tolley08141-MIN.jpg
*City by Landscape* is a series of essays about the German architect Rainer Schmidt. The book's cover features little more than a scattering of sans serif letters, but does so in an artfully arranged way.
Stuart Tolley09156b-MIN.jpg
One section of *MIN* is devoted to production, in which the character of the work comes from the tactile quality of print, rather than graphic design elements. Imprimerie du Marais, a Parisian printing house, created a series of distinct notebooks by using texture, rather than color or shapes.
Stuart Tolley10157-MIN.jpg
Imprimerie du Marais's notebooks, all stacked together in one---yes---simple box.
Stuart Tolley11PSB–02.jpg
For the Pet Shop Boys's 12th studio album, London design studio Farrow created a zig-zag design that hints at the *Electric* album title and reflects the band’s dance- orientated approach to music production.
Stuart Tolley12SDL.jpg
This design approach even works on mundane objects. The Japanese brand Askul carries batteries with no design other than a color and a number that connotes the size.
There’s Finally Video of a Great White Shark in the Mediterranean
A recent video of a great white shark in the Mediterranean Sea offers the possibility of deriving valuable information for conservation strategies.
Marta Musso
GM Wants Your Electric Car to Power Your House—and Your Neighborhood
The automaker today is turning on vehicle-to-grid charging for its GM Energy customers. Will people actually use it?
Aarian Marshall
The Top New Features Coming to MacOS 27 Golden Gate
Apple has announced the latest version of macOS. It’s all about the reintroduction of Siri, which is now accessible from anywhere on the Mac desktop.
Luke Larsen
The Top New Features in Apple’s iOS 27 and iPadOS 27
Apple took the wraps off iOS 27 at its WWDC event, and the iPhone update is chock-full of smart upgrades, with a big focus on improvements to Siri.
Julian Chokkattu
Anthropic Offers Mythos Upgrade for Cyber Partners and a ‘Safe’ Version for the Rest of You
Anthropic is releasing Claude Mythos 5 to trusted organizations and Claude Fable 5 to the public, a version it says can’t be used for cyberattacks.
Maxwell Zeff
Longevity Startup Doses First Human in Bid to Reverse Age-Related Sight Loss
The FDA recently approved the cellular rejuvenation therapy ER-100 for human clinical trials. While vision is the first target, it could have applications for a variety of age-related disease.
Isabella Ward
The Rivian R2 Is the Rivian for the Masses
With a competitive price, winning design, and better performance than the R1, Rivian could be set to break into the big leagues. Just make sure you get the right model with the right tech.
Jeremy White
The Best Smart Bird Feeders for Backyard Birding
These bird feeders come with cameras and connected apps to let you see and learn about the birds in your neighborhood.
Kat Merck
Amazon’s Ember Artline Makes Art TVs More Accessible
The affordable Artline doubles as a design piece and comes close to outshining the reigning champion of art TVs, the Samsung Frame Pro.
John Brandon
The Untold Story of the Google Buses That Took Over San Francisco
A decade ago, commuter buses attracted big protests in San Francisco. Years later, the city is still feeling the repercussions.
Jonathan Weber
Alex Vindman Survived Trump’s Retaliation Machine. Now He’s Running for Senate
In 2019, Alex Vindman testified during President Trump’s first impeachment trial–a decision that ended his military career. Now he wants to challenge the president from the halls of Congress.
Katie Drummond
Anguished Parents, Crying Doctors: Life Amid Utah’s Measles Outbreak
The state’s outbreak means adapting to America’s new reality, in which vaccine-preventable diseases become common again.
Amy Maxmen, KFF Health News