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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#11
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In message , at 10:50:15 on Mon, 30
Oct 2017, Clive Page remarked: Not one of his best efforts, it seems to me. The flights of associated companies being shown in black are much more prominent in the diagram than those of Imperial Airways, shown in a rather weedy reddish. Or perhaps they just faded? Then the daily flights between, I assume, important routes are shown in a rather inconspicuous way with dashed lines, whereas the less frequent routes have solid colour. It's impossible to guess, without looking at the key, which routes have the greater frequencies. I'd have thought it would be a rather basic precept of graphic design to have prominence of the line proportion to service frequency, or at least proportional to something useful. And the representations of summer-only and winter-only seem to have no connection to each other. Maybe this was a draft and he did a better one later? Here's his early draft of the London map: https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/lTnP...ew=/800x0/filt ers:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/2720278/03.13 64558584.jpg I'd expect them to exist in various degrees of hand-drawn sophistication before being productionised by an artist rather than a designer. Perhaps recliner can tell us if this map was ever a public document circulated by the airline. -- Roland Perry |
#12
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:50:15 on Mon, 30 Oct 2017, Clive Page remarked: Not one of his best efforts, it seems to me. The flights of associated companies being shown in black are much more prominent in the diagram than those of Imperial Airways, shown in a rather weedy reddish. Or perhaps they just faded? Then the daily flights between, I assume, important routes are shown in a rather inconspicuous way with dashed lines, whereas the less frequent routes have solid colour. It's impossible to guess, without looking at the key, which routes have the greater frequencies. I'd have thought it would be a rather basic precept of graphic design to have prominence of the line proportion to service frequency, or at least proportional to something useful. And the representations of summer-only and winter-only seem to have no connection to each other. Maybe this was a draft and he did a better one later? Here's his early draft of the London map: https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/lTnP...ew=/800x0/filt ers:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/2720278/03.13 64558584.jpg I'd expect them to exist in various degrees of hand-drawn sophistication before being productionised by an artist rather than a designer. Perhaps recliner can tell us if this map was ever a public document circulated by the airline. I don't know, as I just spotted it on Twitter. I'd not seen it before then, not even in the old posters and ads that BA puts up in its lounges. |
#13
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 09:07:54 on Mon, 30 Oct 2017, Peter Able remarked: Here's another variant. I can't see Beck's name on it, but the schematic map is certainly in his style: https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~267441~90041892:Imperial-Airways-Map-of-Empire-&-Eu Yes, I came across that, apparent, plagiarism of Beck's efforts. "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" -- Roland Perry Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... PA |
#14
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In message , at 15:23:51 on Mon, 30 Oct
2017, Peter Able remarked: Here's another variant. I can't see Beck's name on it, but the schematic map is certainly in his style: https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~267441~90041892:Imperial-Airways-Map-of-Empire-&-Eu Yes, I came across that, apparent, plagiarism of Beck's efforts. "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... I think plagiarise implies copying something pretty much intact from one work to another. This instance is simply very much "in the style of". -- Roland Perry |
#15
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 15:23:51 on Mon, 30 Oct 2017, Peter Able remarked: Here's another variant. I can't see Beck's name on it, but the schematic map is certainly in his style: https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~267441~90041892:Imperial-Airways-Map-of-Empire-&-Eu Yes, I came across that, apparent, plagiarism of Beck's efforts. "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... I think plagiarise implies copying something pretty much intact from one work to another. This instance is simply very much "in the style of". -- Roland Perry I don't doubt that you may well think that. Dare you consult a dictionary, Roland? This is overt plagiarism. PA |
#16
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![]() "Peter Able" wrote in message news ![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 09:07:54 on Mon, 30 Oct 2017, Peter Able remarked: Here's another variant. I can't see Beck's name on it, but the schematic map is certainly in his style: https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~267441~90041892:Imperial-Airways-Map-of-Empire-&-Eu Yes, I came across that, apparent, plagiarism of Beck's efforts. "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" -- Roland Perry Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... Try looking up "without acknowledgement". A first requirement for plagiarism is an intention to deceive. PA Could you please explain how the schematic map which Harry Beck devised for the London Underground differed in any substantial way from the schematic circuit diagrams which he produced as a draughtsman during the day ? At a superficial level I'd say both consist of nodes either components or stations so arranged such that they can be connected by lines either at right angles or diagonally. Clearly you must think there's something more, as similarly you clearly don't think that Harry Beck simply plagiarised the principles laid down by the un-named originators of the first circuit diagrams. As presumably you're prepared for these true pioneers of schematic diagrams to remain unrecognised by posterity. michael adams .... |
#17
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In message , at 17:56:19 on Mon, 30 Oct
2017, Peter Able remarked: "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... I think plagiarise implies copying something pretty much intact from one work to another. This instance is simply very much "in the style of". I don't doubt that you may well think that. Dare you consult a dictionary, Roland? This is overt plagiarism. "the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own" where 'draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck' comprehensively refutes that. -- Roland Perry |
#18
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![]() I notice that the DLR now show multiple routes on their map. http://content.tfl.gov.uk/dlr30-leaflet-and-map.pdf |
#19
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 17:56:19 on Mon, 30 Oct 2017, Peter Able remarked: "This extraordinary world map by noted Bauhaus designer and artist, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck and his London subway maps" Hmm. "draws on" - spelt p-l-a-g ..... I think plagiarise implies copying something pretty much intact from one work to another. This instance is simply very much "in the style of". I don't doubt that you may well think that. Dare you consult a dictionary, Roland? This is overt plagiarism. "the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own" where 'draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck' comprehensively refutes that. and who wrote that quotation? |
#20
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In message , at 18:45:28 on Tue, 31 Oct
2017, Peter Able remarked: This is overt plagiarism. "the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own" where 'draws on the pioneering information design work of Harry Beck' comprehensively refutes that. and who wrote that quotation? The first is from an online dictionary, the second from David Rumsey's website. -- Roland Perry |
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