DesignFestival: Design Festival Podcast #10: Chats with Elliot Jay Stocks

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Welcome back to the show after a brief hiatus. This week I caught up with the well-​​known designer Elliot Jay Stocks. We talk about his career, his “8 Faces” typography mag, email management made easier with TextExpander, conferencing, and more.

 

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Episode Summary

Presenters

Content Rundown

  • Guest intro
  • Sourhaze, Elliot’s first instrumental EP
  • How we all get into what we do — education, jobs… careers, freelancing
  • Working environments coworking
  • 8 Faces, Elliot’s gorgeous typography magazine
  • Events Elliot is involved with: Insites and Activate, and and attending/​running events and industry conferences
  • TextExpander, a system-​​wide snippert and shortcut utility
  • Sexy Web Design, Elliot’s book
  • Recommendations of the week

Recommendations

  • Elliot: Oomwriter, a simplistic text editor, with ambient background sounds, and Flickery, a native Mac client to flickr.
  • Pascal: Nothing in particular this week.

Oh, and the intro and outro music is from the Portal 2 soundtrack

“If you feel liquid running down your neck, relax, lie on your back, and apply immediate pressure to your temples. You are simply experiencing a rare reaction in which the Material Emancipation Grill may have emancipated the ear tubes inside your head.”

Audio Transcript

To be added soon.

Related posts:

  1. Design Festival Podcast #8: Web Standards with Derek Featherstone
  2. Design Festival Podcast #7: Setting Standards-​​​​Friendly Web Type (Part 2)
  3. Design Festival Podcast #9: Design for Mobile Apps and Websites
  4. SitePoint Podcast #111: Responsive Web Design with Jeremy Keith
  5. Design Festival Podcast #2: The Cicada Project

Simon Pascal Klein

Pascal is a standardista graphic, web and front-end designer, and a rampant typophile. Born in Mainz, Germany—the birthplace of Gutenberg—he now works in Canberra as a contract designer and studies at the Australian National University. He’s been actively engaged in the Open Source community and local web industry, notably as one of the unorganisers to first bring BarCamp to Canberra. He enjoys drinking in as much good type as he can get and has been happily bending beziers since 2004.

http://klepas.org → Twitter →