Also via the Design Files (Thanks Lucy), Foxs Lane is the Blog of organic farmer Kate, currently dragging her family around Australia in a Caravan. I drove around Australia a few years ago in a campervan, was an unreal experience, and seeing these photos I am thinking caravan is the way to go.
Sydney photographer and artist Anna Pogossova has a new website. This post was submitted by Teagues.
The Secret Life of Things. Short animated videos and educational resources on eco-design and life cycle thinking.
Webmaster Showcase is a place for freelance web designers, web design companies, agencies and studios to share designs. The site is broken down into several galleries including CSS, Flash, CMS, and iPhone.
We are seeing a lot of great work come out of Tasmania lately, the latest is from David Fooks, a freelance visual artist and designer specialising in illustration and design for print and web. This post was submitted by Dominic Whittle.
The blog of Monash Uni student Mete Erdogan.
This is very interesting, and great to see an overview of exactly how many different indigenous languages there are in Australia. This indiginous language map was created by David R Horton and can be found over on the abc website. Originally created by AIATSIS (Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies) Found via [...]
New blog based out of Melbourne by two graphic designers Eirian and Allira. This post was submitted by Eirian Chapman.
New site launched by the guys over at Lost At E Minor. The Colour is a collection of reader submitted Australian images. “We recently unveiled our latest website, The Colour, a reader submitted collection of beautiful Australian-themed images. The Colour features the best in new art, photography, illustration, music, products and fashion, and it all [...]
The new Australian INFront site has now gone live. Lovely and clean with a lot of added functionality, we are looking forward to staying extra up-to-date with what’s going on in Australia with the site.
Similar to google maps, but instead of using satellite images, Nearmap uses images shot from planes flying at 7000ft. This results in incredibly high resolution images. Cities are also mapped every month, with the ability to view the history of a location over time, by accessing the historical shots.