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Friday, July 13, 2018

Susan Kare, Iconic Designer | Lemelson Center for the Study of ...
src: invention.si.edu

Susan Kare (born February 5, 1954) is an artist and graphic designer who created many of the interface elements and typefaces for the Apple Macintosh in the 1980s. She was also Creative Director (and one of the original employees) at NeXT, the company formed by Steve Jobs after he left Apple in 1985. She has worked for Microsoft and IBM, and, more recently, Pinterest and Facebook.


Video Susan Kare



Background

Kare was born in Ithaca, New York, and is the sister of aerospace engineer Jordin Kare. She graduated from Harriton High School in 1971, graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. in Art from Mount Holyoke College in 1975, and received a Ph.D. from New York University in 1978. She next moved to San Francisco and worked for the Fine Arts Museums. She is married, and has three children.


Maps Susan Kare



Apple career

Kare joined Apple Computer after receiving a call from high-school friend Andy Hertzfeld in the early 1980s. A member of the original Apple Macintosh design team, she worked at Apple starting in 1982 (Badge #3978). Kare was originally hired into the Macintosh software group to design user interface graphics and fonts; her business cards read "HI Macintosh Artist". Later, she was a Creative Director in Apple Creative Services working for the Director of that organization, Tom Suiter.

She is the designer of many typefaces, icons, and original marketing material for the original Macintosh operating system. Descendants of her groundbreaking work can still be seen in many computer graphics tools and accessories, especially icons such as the Lasso, the Grabber, and the Paint Bucket. These designs created the first visual language for Apple's new point-and-click computing.

Kare was an early pioneer of pixel art. Her most recognizable works from her time with Apple are the Chicago typeface (the most prominent user-interface typeface seen in classic Mac OS interfaces from System 1 in 1984, to Mac OS9 in 1999, as well as the typeface used in the first four generations of the Apple iPod interface); the Geneva typeface; the original monospace Monaco typeface; "Clarus the Dogcow"; the "Happy Mac" icon (the smiling computer that welcomed Mac users when starting their machines), and the Command key symbol on Apple keyboards.


Susan Kare, Iconographer (EG8) on Vimeo
src: i.vimeocdn.com


After Apple

After leaving Apple, Kare joined NeXT as a designer, working with clients such as Microsoft and IBM. Her projects for Microsoft included the card deck for Windows 3.0's solitaire game, as well as numerous icons and design elements for Windows 3.0. Many of her icons, such as those for Notepad and various Control Panels, remained essentially unchanged by Microsoft until Windows XP. For IBM, she produced icons and design elements for OS/2; for Eazel she contributed iconography to the Nautilus file manager.

In 2003, she became a member of the advisory board of Glam Media (now Mode Media).

Between 2006 and 2010 she produced icons for the "Gifts" feature of Facebook. Initially, profits from gift sales were donated to the Susan G. Komen for the Cure foundation. After Valentine's Day 2007, the gift selection was modified to include new and limited edition gifts that did not necessarily pertain to Valentine's Day. One of the gift icons, titled "Big Kiss" is also featured in some versions of Mac OS X as a user account picture.

In 2007 she designed the identity, icons and website for Chumby Industries, Inc. and their internet-enabled alarm clock whose interface she also designed.

Since 2008 The Museum of Modern Art store in New York City has carried stationery and notebooks featuring her designs. In 2015 MoMA also acquired her notebooks of sketches that led to the early Mac icons.

In August 2012, she was called as an expert witness by Apple in the company's patent-infringement trial against industry competitor Samsung (see Apple Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co.).

In 2015, Kare was hired by Pinterest as a product design lead. As of 2010, she heads a digital design practice in San Francisco and sells limited-edition, signed fine-art prints.

In recognition of her design work, Kare was awarded the American Institute of Graphic Arts medal in April 2018.


Susan Kare, Iconographer - Typography Videos - Typography.Guru
src: typography.guru


References


Iconic Designer Susan Kare Explains How ⌘ Came to Be -
src: haberdashdesign.com


External links

  • Official website
  • Fonts created by Kare
  • Quinn, Michelle (25 January 1995). "Art That Clicks: Icon designer strives for simplicity". San Francisco Chronicle. 
  • Penfold, Mark (30 September 2005). "Design Icon: The Mac Icons". Computer Arts Magazine. 

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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