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Jude Stewart

    This author explores the intersection of design and culture through their essays and blog posts. Their work, featured in prominent magazines, often delves into visual elements like color and patterns, all while infused with a distinctive humor and perspective. Operating from Chicago, they draw inspiration from the urban landscape, offering readers a unique lens through which to view the often-overlooked aspects of design.

    Patternalia
    ROY G. BIV
    Revelations In Air
    • 2021

      Revelations In Air

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      3.8(121)Add rating

      "An extraordinary, strange, and startlingly beautiful exploration of smell, the least understood of our five senses Overlapping with taste yet larger in scope, smell is the sense that comes closest to pure perception. Smell can collapse space and time, unlocking memories and transporting us to worlds both new and familiar. Yet as clearly as each of us can recognize different smells--the bright tang of citrus, freshly sharpened pencils, parched earth after rain--few of us understand how and why we smell. In Revelations in Air, Jude Stewart takes us on a fascinating journey into the weird and wonderful world of smell. Beginning with lessons on the incredible biology and history of how our noses work, Stewart teaches us how to use our noses like experts. Once we're properly equipped and ready to sniff, Stewart explores a range of smells-from lavender, cut grass and hot chocolate to cannabis and old books-using smell as a lens into art, history, science, and more. With an engaging colorful design and exercises for readers to refine their own skills, Revelations in Air goes beyond science or history or chemistry--it's a doorway into the surprising, pleasurable, and unfamiliar landscape of smell"-- Provided by publisher

      Revelations In Air
    • 2015

      Patternalia

      • 145 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      From the author and designer of "ROY G. BIV," a delightful, fully illustrated new volume on patterns, from polka dots to plaid: their histories, cultural resonances, and hidden meanings.

      Patternalia
    • 2013

      Why is the sky blue? Why is pink for girls and blue for boys? Why do prisoners wear orange? And why can one colour have so many opposite meanings? If lobsters are a red emblem of privilege how is it that a red flag can also be the banner of Communism? Jude Stewart, a design expert and writer, digs into this rich subject with gusto, telling her favourite stories about colour as she discovers what it can really mean.

      ROY G. BIV