Delicious digital morsels served on a crisp bed of verbiage, sprinkled with freshly picked links and lashings of multimedia goodness. Occasionally.
Bio
Jim spends his days as a digital guy at The Leith Agency, spare minutes spinning Leith Records and nights howling at the moon. All views expressed are mostly none of his own.
Loading Tweet...
Two years into their wonderfully-orchestrated Campaign of Mysterious Oddness, those iamamiwhoami videos keep on...
A very compact summary of design elements, in under 3mins: The Fundamental elements for design summarizes. - Erica Gorochow (via @Core77)
Earlier generations have weathered recessions, of course; this stall we’re in has the look of something...

©Georgia Kemball
Wikipedia trivia: if you take any article, click on the first link in the article text not in parentheses or italics, and...
Earlier today major updates just went live for all six of the Style Hatch premium Tumblr themes. Now all of the themes...
Carl Sagan.
From this distant vantage point, the Earth might not seem of particular interest. But for us, it’s different. Look again at that dot....
If you’re going to go down, you might as well blame it on an imaginary animal like Twitter did with their infamous Fail Whale. I’ve...
This Wednesday I’ve been kindly asked by Data Discoveries and Perspective Partners to come along to the Radisson in Edinburgh’s Royal...
4 posts tagged charity
VOTE DEAN CAUVIN
Leith was recently asked by the Dean and Cauvin Trust to help them win a National Lottery Good Causes Award for their work with vulnerable young people in Edinburgh.
They originally started assisting orphans on the Royal Mile way back in 1733, and currently work to prevent homelessness and the dangers which go with it, helping vulnerable young people to live independently and happily.
To help them continue their brilliant work by winning Lottery funding, we produced this short film to help spread the word. We’d massively appreciate it if you could take 30 seconds to vote for them here and spread this video far and wide via social networks, email and carrier pigeons.
The video was inspired by the excellent 500 People in 100 Seconds, and features the doubly excellent So Much For Love, by Gramatik (free download here).

Sparked: A clever, simple, well-designed site enabling people to do “micro-volunteering” jobs for charities. A bit like Mechanical Turk for good deeds.
Genius idea to raise money for clean toilets and santisation.
via @saatchidesign
Loading posts...