The Royal Wedding

The Royal Wedding February 2006 | Filed under Photos, Still Life | Comments (2)

Among the many, many truckloads of royal-watching paraphernalia found at my grandparents' house was this Women's Weekly Royal Wedding Preview. Sitting up in their Good Sitting Room (not to be confused with the Best Sitting Room) to watch Charles and Di get hitched is one of my earliest memories.

Views from the Floor

kate says:

Last year I went rifling through magazines in the waiting room of my then workplace and discovered, much to my delight, a copy of the Women's Day Charles and Di Wedding! Needless to say I was thrilled at the survival of the twenty year old mag.

Mel says:

Di's dress is back in fashion - I'm sure I've seen it in several shop windows lately.

Speak, friend, and enter


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3 February 2009
Filed under Books, Text

I’ve just paid for and downloaded a PDF book by Mark Boulton called Five Simple Steps: Designing for the Web. It’s a really nicely-designed publication, and although I’ve only glanced through it so far, it seems to be chock-full of great advice and examples. I’m also really impressed the way Mark’s gone about promoting it via his networks over the last six months or so.

The only sticking point for me is the application of a software-license-style fee structure: 12 pounds1 for ‘one user’, 25 pounds for five, and 50 pounds for a ten-user license. I haven’t really got that much to say about this, other than that books are surely meant to be shared, and in their sharing gain all kinds of attributes not as easily quantifiable as cash – influence over a broader audience, for example.

Compare Mark’s payment structure with that of Massimo Vignelli, who recently released a book-length PDF of his musings free of charge - I’m not for one second suggesting that Mark shouldn’t profit from his book, but rather that it may be interesting to try to gauge the comparative merits of reach and profit, to determine whether over time, reach leads to greater influence, and therefore – presumably – more demand for your services, and thus more money). Of course, Vignelli’s got both reach and (one assumes) cash in bucketloads, so perhaps he’s not the best example.

1No, I can’t be bothered finding the pound sign

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