THURSDAY, APRIL 18. DRINKS AT 7:00. SHOW AT 8:00.
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After three years of showing off our Unsung Heroes, we're trying something new. A night of curated videos from some of our favorite Cali-based photographers and illustrators.
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So don't miss this stellar night of Right Brain thinking on the Left Coast, hosted by Charlie Hess, Lisa Thackaberry, Carol LeFlufy, Heidi Volpe, and David Armario.
6:30 cocktails. 7:30 presentations. Followed by more cocktails and more mingling. RSVP now to guarantee your place at the party.
When Bloomberg Businessweek launched their redesign (and re-imagination) of the magazine at the end of April, the response from the publication design community was somewhat underwhelming. The first couple covers were solid but not remarkable, the insides were crisply formatted but a bit overstuffed, and the imagery had yet to find its full voice.
It's time to take another look. In the succeeding months, the new design has grown and matured into a remarkable visual package. Week after week, creative director Richard Turley and his crew are producing stunning covers and features, along with tightly formatted interior pages that rival New York for their texture, density, creativity, and attention to detail. This is state-of-the-art magazine design, with highly-original and intelligent photos, graphics, and illustrations. It's a look that fuses the formatting brilliance of New York and the smart visual approach of The New York Times Magazine, with a hierarchy and architecture lifted from the best British and European publications (the Guardian chief among them). Most impressively, Businessweek has a high level of visual intelligence, challenging its readers, pushing the boundaries of traditional newsweekly and business magazine design. ...