#Anatomy of a book design

December 17, 2010

Anatomy of a book design: On teachers and bankers

This is the eighth installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll’s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was written in…

December 9, 2010

Anatomy of a book design: Of bonnets and billiards

This is the seventh installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll’s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was written in…

December 2, 2010

Anatomy of a book design #6: A sense of direction

This is the sixth installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll‘s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was…

November 22, 2010

Anatomy of a book design #3: Enter philosophy

This is the third installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll‘s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was written in 1874 but…

November 15, 2010

The anatomy of a book design, #2: “This is not my box”

This is the second installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll’s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was written in…

November 10, 2010

Anatomy of a book design, #1: A concept emerges

This is the first installment of a series by artist Mahendra Singh on the process of adapting Lewis Carroll’s classic nonsense poem, The Hunting of a Snark, into a graphic presentation. Like most of Carroll’s work, this poem has seen various iterations since it was…