On Brass, Paper,
and Quiet Hours
Today the studio smelled of graphite and lemon oil. I spent the morning cleaning the typebars of the Olivetti, and thinking about how interfaces used to feel — weight in the hand, a click you could hear across the room, a button that rewarded the finger before it rewarded the task.
The software of that era borrowed shamelessly from the world. Buttons wore bevels. Calendars were torn. Calculators had depressed keys, felt a little, then returned. There was something honest in it. The pixel was new, so we dressed it in brass.
Flatness came, and flatness was necessary. But I keep a drawer of skeuomorphs here on the desk, the way a sommelier keeps corks — not to relitigate the past, but to remember that material was once a design primitive.