My name is Brandon Bernard. I'm a graphic designer, storyboard and layout artist, and writer. I was born and raised in Albuquerque, NM, and lived in Los Angeles for 12 years. I'm currently in Austin, TX. "Design Intervention" is a virtual scrapbook of things that inspire me. Unless otherwise specified, the work here is not mine.
In 1997, Last Unicorn gave Zug the chance at recreating Frank Herbert’s ‘Dune’ through a new trading card...
“Is there a moment that you look back on as your ‘low point’ in Vietnam?”
“Yeah. Thirty minutes before we got there. When the plane took off in New...
This is such a brilliant blend of nature and civilization.
I can has this right?
Omg so cute :33
“Is there a particular memory that represents childhood for you?”
“Probably laying in bed when my parents had parties, listening to my parents’...
Seen in Harlem
World’s friendliest looking dog spotted off 5th Ave.
And I Won’t Close My Eyes
771 posts tagged poster
(via Max Rose: Extra Large Movie Poster Image - Internet Movie Poster Awards Gallery)
Not sure what this movie is, but I really like its poster
Check out the poster for Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity
poster designed by The Refinery
Everything in its right place
Typefaces for People with Dyslexia By designer Felix Lobelius
The official 2013 Cannes poster featuring Joanne Woodward & Paul Newman from Melville Shavelson’s A New Kind Of Love, 1963
(via rottinghaus)
“People tell you who they are, but we ignore it because we want them to be who we want them to be.” — Don Draper
(via geek-art)
JetBlue Pitch Posters
Lab Partners created posters for Goodby, Silverstein and Partners as part of their pitch for Jet Blue.
(via leviathansociety)
It’s cool how “HOT” was abstracted from the title and turned into a little icon for Marilyn Monroe to crouch in front of. I like it!
French grande for THE ENFORCER (Bretaigne Windust, USA, 1951)
Artist: René Péron (1904-1972) [see also]
Poster source: Fan de Cinéma
“Director Bretaigne Windust, an accomplished Broadway director, fell seriously ill during the beginning of shooting, so Raoul Walsh was brought in to finish the film. Walsh refused to take the credit, calling it Windust’s work…. Walsh shot most of the film’s suspenseful moments, including the ending.” -Wikipedia
Movie Poster of the Day is now on Facebook.
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