A skeuomorph, pronounced /ˈskjuːəmɔrf/ SKEW-ə-morf, or skeuomorphism (Greek: skeuos—vessel or tool, morphe—shape)[1] is a derivative object which retains ornamental design cues to a structure that was necessary in the original.[2] Skeuomorphs may be deliberately employed to make the new look comfortably old and familiar,[3] such as copper cladding on zinc pennies or computer printed postage with circular town name and cancellation lines.Now I see skeuomorphs everywhere! But my new cheesy over the-top favourite was found in a flyer today...this disturbing bit of retro-80s paraphernalia:
(from Innovative Technologies) The whole thing is a mass of skeuomorphic over-design. Although, I must admit, the iWhatever that's inserted into the 'tape' deck looks lovely and spacey.
Lori
2 comments:
I love finding words like that! My mom once told me a single word she came across that describes how a flock of birds or school of fish twist and turn as one, and all I can remember is it starts with "S".
Well, that could be a cool, maybe not useful, word...'shoaling' perhaps? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoaling_and_schooling
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