Launched: The Woodsman Tavern Website

We have just launched a website for The Woodsman Tavern. This is our kind of place: the whiskey is plentiful, the oysters are bright, and the folks are genuine. We had an absolutely delightful time at their soft opening this past weekend. The doors are open now (5 to 10 daily); do stop in and say hello.

We designed the Woodsman website as a strong visual introduction to the atmosphere of this Southeast Portland gathering spot. This is a place where someone in the neighborhood could stop in for a drink and a snack on the way home or young lovers could while away the evening making eyes at each other over a bottle of wine and the most delicious courses you could imagine. (And, the website is a mobile-friendly, resposive design. Of course!)

Read more in our portfolio or visit The Woodsman Tavern.

The Future of Client Services

After reading Khoi Vinh’s post a while back, The End of Client Services, I found myself both invigorated and heartbroken. Khoi (and others) make strong arguments for the opportunities that about for people like us who know how to harness the internet. Their points are valid and come from a good place. However, for me, right now, Needmore Designs is my startup. It is my dream. And, part of that dream is helping others to tell their stories.

The notion that storytelling is the the key component to design services in the past is true. And, times marches on. But the question in my mind is: do our clients still need us to tell their stories? I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t think the answer was still a resounding yes.

I used to be quite proud when I could tell someone that we’d create an updateable website for them and then they’d never have to pay me a dime again. I was liberating them from the shackles of web oppression by handing them the keys to their destiny. It is true that the keys to the kingdom have opened wide; Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, free templates, and other monetarily cheap forms of communication abound online. Take one step on the internet and you have found a pulpit from which to preach about your thoughts, your brand, your event. When there are so many options, what is one to do?

Almost because there are so many options out there, I now see our role these days as both designer and guide. And, this is a good place to be. Further, is requires a longer term relationship with clients where iteration can happen over time. Which is a good thing for me and my client.

Steve Jobs

When I was younger, I never found school particularly inspiring. I was never someone who did all that well in any classes, but all that changed when computers came into the classroom. Like most schools, ours got Apple II computers.

I don’t think I got anything but an A+ in a computer class. I became obsessed with these computers. At my house, we had an Atari, but I was always sneaking off to friends houses to play with their Apple computers. There was something way cooler about them. They were odd and there were shortcomings, but they somehow stood out dramatically compared with other computers of the time. The simple Apple icon, the rainbow of colors, the design. While other kids at school were covering their backpacks with band names and movie stars, I was drawing an Apple logo. Looking back, I realize now that I was drawn to more than just the technology, even as a kid. I was drawn to the design as well.

Apple faded a bit after that. I struck out on my own, and didn’t care as much about computers. I had hacked together PCs running every kind of Windows and Linux, but the love wasn’t there. Perhaps the love for me was with hopping trains, hitchhiking, taking drugs, working odd jobs, even being a vegetarian. The kinds of things some miscreants get into in their 20s. Guilty as charged.

But about the time I really settled down in Portland, something happened. Apple stopped making beige computers like everybody else, and found their footing. They got up and started fighting again. They started to once again stand for something other than bland boxes of miscellaneous hardware. They started to look like they were designed again, like they had passion.

Steve was back.

Since then, Steve Jobs, as head once again of Apple Inc., changed so many things, and in a good way. Over and over, he put control over music in the hands of the customer, not the corporations. He brought us some of the most liberating and enjoyable personal devices ever made, from the iPod to the iPhone to the iPad. And the computers just got more and more beautiful. He continued to force Apple to improve things no other company would have ever bothered to improve.

He did it because he believed, all along, deep down inside, that making the best thing you can make is always the right thing to do. And maybe, just maybe, against all imaginable odds, you will win.

“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life,” Jobs said. “Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”

Thanks, Steve. You will never be forgotten.

iPhone Love

My iPhone and I get along well. Besides acting as a phone, it gives me directions when I am lost, mentions when I need to grab a coat before I head out the door, reminds me of family birthdays, and keeps me company when I have insomnia in the middle of the night. And yet, more and more, I have been feeling suffocated. My iPhone and I are just a bit too cozy these days.

After I mentioned (nay, Facebooked) the idea of taking a break from my iPhone, my partner responded with trepidation.

“That’s like getting rid of all the food in your house just to go on a diet.”

“Ah,” I noted, “but we actually need food to survive.”

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