Posts tagged work
Food Sense
This morning I launched a new site called Food Sense for a fantastic new client from Philly. In a nutshell:
Food Sense is a unique resource for thoughtful, food-loving eaters and home cooks who have a palate for plant-based eating - for themselves or their loved ones; three days a week, or every day of the year.
I’ve been working on it for the past several weeks and I’m excited to share it with the world. I enjoyed having the opportunity to go from branding consultation all the way through to the design, development and launch of the site.
We went the responsive route with the layout and I’m glad we did. It gave me an opportunity to test out the concept on a large site. It is more work but I love the results. The layout beautifully adapts to the browser/screen size, including the slideshow on the homepage (which proved to be an interesting challenge). I really believe responsive web design is here to stay…
I’m not a vegan/vegetarian but constantly seeing all these dishes while I was working sure made me hungry. I’m looking forward to incorporating some of the recipes in our meal rotation.
Go check it out! Get some food sense :)

work work work
I have no idea how people can work 8 hours day, 5 days a week for a long while. I can understand someone working with what they love 24 hours a day though.. but if you are that lucky to land a job like that, it’s just not work anymore!
Agreed.
“ I don’t think there’s a relationship between what you do and how important you think the work is. I think there’s a relationship between who you are and how important you think the work is.”
“ The work you do while you procrastinate is probably the work you should be doing for the rest of your life.”
XP
- Eric: I hate Windows! I wish I could work on a mac...
- Me: Are you guys on XP?
- Eric: Yeah, XP. If you look at "XP" like you would a emoticon you would get a dude with his tongue sticking out and eyes shut hard. That's exactly what I'm doing...
“ Observe people who are good at their work — skilled workers are always in demand and admired; they don’t take a back seat to anyone.”
The Boom is Over. Long Live the Art!
It’s day-job time again in America, and that’s O.K. Artists have always had them — van Gogh the preacher, Pollock the busboy, Henry Darger the janitor — and will again. The trick is to try to make them an energy source, not a chore.
(via APhotoEditor)
“ Everything I’ve ever done has taken me longer than I thought it would.”