 I hadn’t come across Clive Richards’s collection of chance encounters with signage before, many of which seem to show a particularly English brand of gentle humour.
I hadn’t come across Clive Richards’s collection of chance encounters with signage before, many of which seem to show a particularly English brand of gentle humour.
Paul Luna’s book, Typography: A Very Short Introduction, is published by Oxford University Press
Accidental subversions
 I hadn’t come across Clive Richards’s collection of chance encounters with signage before, many of which seem to show a particularly English brand of gentle humour.
I hadn’t come across Clive Richards’s collection of chance encounters with signage before, many of which seem to show a particularly English brand of gentle humour.
By Underground to Southend-on-Sea
 From 1910 to 1939, you could take a District Railway train all the way to Southend-on-Sea.* So it’s appropriate that that’s the venue for an exhibition of new takes on Harry Beck’s Underground diagram, featuring work by Maxwell Roberts. Here are the details.
From 1910 to 1939, you could take a District Railway train all the way to Southend-on-Sea.* So it’s appropriate that that’s the venue for an exhibition of new takes on Harry Beck’s Underground diagram, featuring work by Maxwell Roberts. Here are the details.* John Robert Day, John Reed (2005). The story of London's underground (9 ed.). Capital Transport. p. 66.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
