Design, simplicity, and the marketplace

Posted by Rob Walker on February 23, 2009
Posted Under: "Good Design" (Tyranny of)

single_300So, speaking of design: I’m interested to learn, via Better Living Through Design, about the Normal Bookmark. It is “a simple, plain bookmark made from quality paper with a natural texture and color.” It is further described as a reaction to a “flashy” free bookmark that came with a purchase from a shop and that thus included that shop’s logo. This logo-ed bookmark:

reminded me of today’s busy society, where every company is trying to outdo, outsmart, out-compete and out-advertise each other. As a result, I feel our simple human lives have become quite suffocated and fatigued under the overwhelming pressure from modern-day media.

Good design is design that is invisible and should be free of the designer’s ego.

Thus the Normal Bookmark is just a blank piece of thick paper. With rounded edges. A pack of five costs $7.

Now I ask you: Is charging more than a dollar for a blank piece of thick paper really an example of “good design”?

It’s not clear what the specific paper-type is, or whether it’s, I don’t know, recycled or something okay now I see this page says the paper is “quality paper from managed and renewed forests.” That’s still pretty vague for me.

But seriously: Couldn’t anyone “distracted” by overly colorful bookmarks simply look around their apartment/home and find some suitably blank scrap material that could be repurposed into a bookmark? And for that matter, aren’t we in a recession where everybody is supposedly trying to be all conspicuously frugal? Or is this really just a satire?

Further diversion may be found at MKTG Tumblr, and the Consumed Facebook page.

Reader Comments

Receipts make pretty good bookmarks and are remarkably “ego-free”.

#1 
Written By cousin lymon on February 23rd, 2009 @ 8:37 pm

Doing a search of your site re:simplicity I came across this post.

Not sure I’ve found my answer.

Sex sells. I wonder if simplicity of this order does?

Keep creating…it’s more fun that way,
Mike

#2 
Written By Mike Wagner on September 22nd, 2009 @ 5:52 pm

This makes me wonder what kind of demographic or market segment psyche actually went out and bought into this concept. Thank you for sharing this.

#3 
Written By Anj on June 6th, 2011 @ 12:43 pm