Michael Bierut’s Notebooks
Design Observer: 26 Years, 85 Notebooks
Why a notebook link from the guy who’s over notebook pr0n? Easy. This is all about how Michael Bierut has used his 85 notebooks over the past 26 years.
The notebooks function like a security blanket for me. I can’t go into a meeting unless I have my current notebook in my hand, even if I never open it. Because I carry one everywhere, I tend to misplace them a lot. Losing one makes me frantic.
It’s a fascinating mini-memoir, told through almost three decades of lines in a go-to capture tool. To me, this is much more about habits, cognition, and memory than it is paper and cardboard.
Like most designers, I get asked a lot about my process. A lot of my ideas are so simple and dumb that a simple dumb drawing is all it takes to describe it. I probably did the drawing for the cover of Tibor Kalman’s monograph in a meeting. Picture on the front, stacked type on the spine: what if we did something like this? That’s how it came out. If a process is supposed to have steps, to reflect a method, that isn’t much of a process.
Heh. I disagree. Any process that stops feeling like a process has become an ideal process.
[via: Kottke: 26 years of notes]

