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"Simplify, Simplify!"

Henry David Thoreau threw down the gauntlet in the summer of 1854, and Walden is more relevant than ever. To Live Deliberately is our visual re-imagining of Thoreau's best-known essay, Where I Lived and What I Lived For.

Accompanied by 30 illustrations, the essay challenges the trappings of modern living and embraces an ascetic rejection of material excess and social distractions in exchange for a reconnection with nature as a path to self-discovery.

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"WITTY & ELEGANT"

- Los Angeles Times 

"Clever, Exquisitely Inked"

- My Modern Met 

"VISUAL PUNS"

- Flavorwire 

"GORGEOUS LITERARY ART"

- Book Riot

The Examined Life

For the father who has everything except for the time to think. Three books, two prints, and a notebook: Something to read, something to display, and something for his brilliant ideas.

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Journal

The ideas, art, and inspiration behind what we're making

  • On Consciousness

    On Consciousness

    No one has ever accused Dostoevsky of pulling his punches. When it comes to life’s struggles, he goes right for the jugular. This makes him something of a bummer when life is going well, but truly invaluable when things get tough. ...

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  • WWSD (What Would Seneca Do?)

    WWSD (What Would Seneca Do?)

    In the face of an overwhelming, infuriating, almost-paralyzing array of unanswerable philosophical questions, stoicism starts with the most pragmatic one.What can we actually control? Our judgments, choices, intentions, virtues, efforts, and our focus. What can’t we control? Bad fortunes, when and...

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JANE AUSTEN

Write On

This sharp, ironic voice came so easily to Austen that it pervades her personal letters as well, and this particular quotation from a letter to her sister Cassandra is a wonderful example. 

For the illustration, we chose to pay homage to the beautiful 1894 “Peacock edition” cover, illustrated by Hugh Thomson. The peacock is replaced by a writer at her desk flinging off page after page of prose. And while it would be impractical (if not impossible) to write with a peacock quill, it was too fun of a nod to pass up. For the writing, I devised a way to incorporate Austen’s actual handwriting and words fromPride and Prejudice

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