Melanie Richards

Melanie Richards makes things for the internet and beyond. These are her thinkings and doings.

I am giddy.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my discovery of HTML, right around sixth grade, and how that pushed me down a track to becoming a web-focused designer. Thinking about table-based layouts made me nostalgic, and I wished that I had saved some record of my earliest attempts at making sites.

Thanks to Wayback Machine, I can finally show off the travesty I was making in the early days of user-generated web (and would love to see your tragic firsts too!).

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I have a theory that everyone’s best assets are also their worst. To remind myself of the dangers of wanting to learn everything, here’s a partial list of the things I’ve wanted to learn—in some cases, to deepen partial knowledge—in the past year:

Illustration, bookmaking, history (local, federal, world), human-interest journalism, microfiction, zine crafting, hiking, novel-writing, photography, street hockey, screen-printing, Riso printing, linocut printmaking, cross-stitching, sewing, cooking, Ruby on Rails, Russian language, video art, performance art, dance (hip-hop, modern, ballet), spoken-word poetry, singing, public speaking, short-story-collection writing, starting a new language, saving an old one, gardening, grilling, woodworking (whittling, making furniture), Polish language, the art of cocktail-ery?, stamp collecting, Chinese brush painting, Norse mythology, [deep understanding of] local and federal government, international relations, the science of environmental policy, etymology, Esperanto, Communist wooden language, EVERYTHING ABOUT COLD PLACES EVER, etc, etc, etc…

Curiosity is the creative’s life blood. But to attempt to become sufficiently adept at all of the above would be a lifelong struggle with distraction, half-baked attempts, and I’m guessing, a pinch of loneliness. It’s few of us that can be good at everything, so we have to pick: what’s important now? What gives me life? What makes me a better designer, a happier person?

Priorities.

Ooh look at the lashes

Knew I wanted to draw something tonight but couldn’t think of what. Decided to just doodle with an empty mind; somehow Clockwork Orange popped in my head and this creepo doodle pattern spiraled out from there.

Last weekend I visited Magnolia Gardens in Charleston, SC. While the space has seen plenty of human management, the range of biodiversity is still so amazing. Each tiny plant is the product of millions of years’ revisions, and I feel so inspired to be patient and diligent, to not rush ideas but see the value in “slow.”

The turkeys at the petting zoo reminded me of the Mummer’s Parade. I was so busy composing my shot of that deer that I almost didn’t notice her nudging me. “Food?”

Those flowers might be “giant spotted foxglove.” That pattern would be great on textiles.

After that last picture was taken, I decided to shut off my dying iPhone. My buddy and I then saw a blue heron catch a frog, which was snatched from its beak by a hawk, which flew directly over our heads, struggling frog in its talons. BOOM. NATURE.

So I’ve been putting off that whole rebuilding-the-website thing. Instead of squinting at lines of code, I’ve been drinking tea, reading too many books on my front porch, singing backup at karaoke, reading too many books on the treadmill at the gym, walking around Charleston staring at architecture, buskers, and Southern belles…

Basically, living.

For that reason, I’ve decided not to launch a pixel-perfect portfolio. I’ve always thought it was important to stay a vocal part of the global design community, to contribute ideas to this brand-new-baby of an industry. It seemed clear to me that those good ideas needed to be backed up by good work in order to be taken seriously. I’d still argue that’s true, and I’ll probably scratch that I-swear-I’m-awesome itch in the future. Right now though, I’m nearly a year out of my design program, and it seems important to focus on experiencing life, that great giver of inspiration.

So for now, I’ll be using this journal to explore personal projects and post interesting things I come across: weird bugs, hand-painted signage, great passages from greater books. What this will not be: a series of posts with good design captioned by “hey this thing I saw in my RSS feeds is cool.” That’s 90% of design dialog today, and we need more than that.

And I’m looking for it.