Comment by kfjeifjejfj
5 hours ago
Great job. The deck looks great. Not so sure about the article though.
“Graphic designers have a good, often innate, understanding of patterns, mathematics, logic, and balance.” Shouldn’t be surprising to anyone—that’s like being surprised a good programmer also has a good understanding of logic.
This reads like a very thinly veiled of showing off your project and the process of designing it. A bit dishonest if you ask me.
Kinda. But the breakdowns about the visual language, balance, etc. were interesting to me (I have zero GD experience/education).
What designing cards taught me about B2B sales ...
Give the author their flowers.
Honestly there are worse things to write about. I too am a hard nerd who migrated from backend to frontend and dabbled in design. The discovery of typography, design rules, graphing principles, etc. felt to me like a revelation far outstripping the initial project(s) that inspired them. I read _The Elements of Typographic Style_ (Bringhurst) and Tufte and I read Nielsen's blog every day (back when it was at useit.com).
I wish in retrospect I'd written an article like this one; the wonder is genuine, and the satisfaction from the discovery of heretofore-invisible but trivially demonstrable rules is significant.
Finally, would point out that the author of this piece currently does not have any cards for sale, because they are sold out. :) So not only would it be ethically _ok_ to write an interesting piece that as a side-effect did some art self-promotion (if that were for example the reason the cards sold out,) but we know that, now and going forward, this article _cannot serve as a sales funnel_ because there is nothing being sold!
So, no, this article is fine and the cards are very interesting. I wish I'd been able to order a set, frankly