Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff

Moleskine are definitely one of the most handsome notebooks out there. Artists get to use it to sketch a lot, and some use it as the final canvas for their work, like Rodrigo Enrique Luff.

Rodrigo is an artist from El Salvador, but has been living in Australia for quite some time now to escape from civil war. I must say that these are absolutely impressive. True art in moleskine notebooks, and that’s why Rodrigo is getting featured here. Most of these are as the title states, but some are not in moleskine, but it doesn’t make less of them. For more of his amazing work you should check his portfolio at DeviantART. I hope you enjoy it! Cheers. 😉


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff


Superb Moleskine Art by Rodrigo Enrique Luff

About the author

Hello, everyone! I’m Paulo Gabriel, designer from Porto Alegre, Brazil, born in 1984. I have worked as a webdesigner since 2006, but websites and blogs have been a hobby for me since 1999. Here in Abduzeedo, I try to bring only the hot stuff for you… and hope that all of you enjoy my posts! For more cool stuff, you may also follow me on Twitter.

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Handling Overflow

In checking out Google Flights, a design element caught my attention.

I was intrigued that they decided to have the text fade out instead of using ellipses. Inspecting the code, I expected to find an element in each cell with an image background to create the overlay. This would certainly be the most browser-compatible approach to handling text overflow, which is why I thought they took this approach.

I’ve been a fan of text-overflow: ellipsis because of its browser support. Firefox was the last browser to support the feature, which didn’t get it until version 7. Yes, Internet Explorer has support for it and has since version 6.

The Google implementation ended up using the ::after pseudo-element which isn’t supported in IE6 through 8 (but better support in Firefox) and also uses a linear gradient which completely cut out IE and even older versions of Safari (the old gradient syntax wasn’t used). 

Often design decisions are dictated by technical constraints. This doesn’t seem to be the case and makes me wonder if there was a point where the designer made a conscious choice between the two. When working on Yahoo! Mail, we chose to use text-overflow: ellipsis despite the lack of Firefox 3.6 support and we received bug reports that text would be awkwardly clipped and provided no other visual clue that there’s more information. I wonder if Google suffers the same fate.

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