Designer and artist Carrie Gee was one my colleagues at the SND workshop in St. Louis, and she saw a lot of things that I didn’t. She’s a lot younger and a lot more talented than I am, so I’m interested her point of view. Now that the dust is settling on SND STL, she has composed her thoughts.
Five years ago, when she was Carrie Hoover, she won an internship competition at SND, and she chose to contribute her talents to the San Jose Mercury News. She was soon snapped up by the Oregonian. Today, she’s at Font Bureau, and is art director of Edible Vineyard magazine.
I have to admit that I’m a little relieve to see that even someone representing her generation was apprehensive about the digital revolution. We print types are all a little nervous. But she’s feeling more confident about the future. Read on…

All I ever wanted for a certain chunk of Bridgeport’s downtown was to see 333 State St. go away. A hulking holdover from misguided urban renewal projects, the empty office building blighted Housatonic Community College’s campus and the spiffy Lafayette Tower across the street. It was gross, and in the way. And Housatonic’s main building appeared to be designed with 333′s future demolition in mind.
The third annual Antique and Classic Car Show, juxtaposing Detroit’s finest works with the Park City’s most impressive architecture, escaped the threatened downpour today. It was a stroke of luck for the City Lights Gallery and Downtown Special Services District, which joined forces to present it.




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