CCwebworking is looking for dedicated bloggers to join our online community. This is a great opportunity for students (Especially first years) to get involved and talk about design and/or their experiences at Pratt. If you want to represent your class and become an official CCwebworking blogger please contact us at:
So if you like to blog and you have a lot to say contact us!
The Communications Committee
The Communications Committee, founded on August 29, 2002, came together to formally address the need for coordinated information distribution, activities and events planning at GradComD. Its mission is to complement GradComD's formal educational program by enhancing and enriching our students' academic and social experience.
In 2008, the Communications Committee decided to bring the Pratt GradComD community online. CCwebworking.net is devoted to design and all related fields. It is a chance for students, faculty and alumni of Pratt GradComD to share ideas and discuss design in all its forms. CCwebworking was created to encourage dialogue and will continuously evolve in parallel with the effort of the PrattGradComD community.
The Communications Committee
The Chair
I am delighted that the GradComD blog is up and running. This is great opportunity for the Department, faculty, students and alumni. Having a site for the easy exchange of information and ideas brings all of us closer. It puts our dialogue into real time. Spontaniety always heightens energy. I am looking forward to ensuing lively entries.
This is, however, an official Pratt effort supported by the Institute and GradComD. Consequently, thoughts, opinions, images, etc., expressed on and contained in the blog need to be appropriately professional. Each of us needs to exercise a degree of self-censorship. The sensibilities of others need to be observed. Professor Dolle is the faculty advisor and Professor Klinkowstein has volunteered to provide technical assistance. The faculty with the CCinform staff will provide oversight.
Tom Klinkowstein in 1979 at “The Customer Is Always Right” an interactive performance.
PRATT: Were you always interested in interactive design?
Tom Klinkowstein:My interests go way back, as a kid I wanted to be an astronaut, I started studying physics, but then went into art and design-it was a lot more social! In any case, science and interests in technology helped guide me even as a designer-I came to believe that design was a way I could help frame the future.
PRATT: Which you’re still doing now?
Pratt: How Important is having a presence on the web for you as a designer?
Christina Chong: I think in this day and age you need to have some presence on the web whether for prospective employers or to just promote your work generally. I think it also demonstrates that you’re familiar with a wide range of design mediums and are up-to-date with technology.
Pratt: How has your online behavior changed in the past couple of years?
Christina Chong: I use the web for many different purposes and much more frequently than before. With all the social networking sites and chatting programs it’s a lot easier to keep in touch with people. Also it’s so convenient and quick to get a broad range of information (i.e. news websites) right in front of you.
Steven Heller's Citizen Designer Inspried Christina to use her thesis to create an online collaborative for designers
Poster - Irene Pereyra worked with Tom Klinkowstien to create the internationally acclaimed poster "A day in the life of a designer in 2030”
Pratt: You have a website (www.irenepereyra.com) and a blog
(www.irenepereyra.blogspot.com). How Important is having a presence on the web for you as a designer?
Irene Pereyra: Extremely. For example, last year Tom Klinkowstein and I created a large diagrammatic poster about “a day in the life of a designer in 2030” for the Singapore International Design Festival, which was also shown at Pratt. Design festivals are the traditional way (traditional meaning, pre Web 2.0) to get some sort of exposure outside of your family and friends for design work.

One of our very own students' package design is featured at The Dieline, "the leading package design website."
Read the post here.
Great job, Asli! It really is a very beautiful piece.

Via ShareSomeCandy

This is really a great resource for finding out about new (and old) design books, and if they are worth the usually high price tag they carry.

50 pedestrian/passenger symbols are available free online, thanks to AIGA.
Check out this video.
I just read this article in the current issue of HOW Magazine about the new Graphic Designer, the "Culture Creator." I can relate so much! Although I stand by my opinion that Graphic Design is not art, I think Graphic Designers can be artists and probably should be, as the article's author Matt Mattus says; "the best designers are first and foremost artists. Everything else can be learned. Honest design requires talents that cannot be learned, only improved upon. Those gifts are passion, curiosity and drive."
Read the article here.
Design Sponge is pairing up with the New York Public Library, and invited five Brooklyn artists to get inspired by the library's collection. They have produced a series of videos documenting this process.
Here is the first.

A "polarbearoid" a day by Monica Clapcott.

Submit your definition here.
Via Design Observer.