
Much to the aggravation of my travel companions, when I visit a new area I often am fascinated with the signs and textures of the locale. I usually document the visual and store it away for future motivation and use. A simple search on Flickr demonstrates that clearly, I am not alone in this obsession, but The Journal of Urban Typography brings inspiration without the journey to a new level, be it hand lettered or manufactured signage, each image is an inspirational gem.
Usually it is because I have found some amazing product online such as these typographic blocks which can be configured to spell an animal word, such as rabbit, in English, and Chinese (why not Japanese?), while also being able to form a stylized representation of the animal.

Giant type advises the driver on how to proceed in this Melbourne parking garage designed by Axel Peemöller. I can’t imagine the sensation of driving through seeing messages form and self destruct before your eyes in the process.
I’m an avid photographer of textures since I never know when I am going to have a project and think, “I should have snapped a photo of that interesting crumbling wall I saw on my drive the other day.”
So I happened upon a lovely little resource for designers like myself, bitbox.com.
The focus of the site is more on texture brushes for Photoshop, but what I found most useful is Jay’s textures and texture resources. I know where I’m going next time I need to devise some look involving antiqued paper, which happens more often than one would think.
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