Explore every episode of the podcast Design Notes
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Era of the Generalist: Rachel Been, SVP of Design for Expedia Group | 25 Nov 2025 | 00:43:17 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Rachel Been, SVP of Design for Expedia Group, about her journey from photography to design leadership and why she believes this is "the era of the generalist." The conversation unpacks the recent launch of Expedia's new app on ChatGPT and what it means to design for "non-deterministic flows" and "infinite inputs." Rachel explains how AI is breaking old, linear design paradigms and why, in an age of potential "design slop," deep curiosity and human-centered craft are more important than ever.
Read a transcript and check out more from me at interfacecafe.com
Episode Chapters: 00:00 Introduction | |||
| Other Than Expected: Fabian Bircher on Combining Art, Architecture, and Code | 14 Oct 2025 | 00:38:19 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Zürich-based architect and artist Fabian Bircher, whose work spans buildings, custom lighting, and interactive installations. Fabian discusses his unique creative process, where inspiration flows from both artistic concepts and the discovery of new technological possibilities. The conversation explores the materiality of light through his Buoy lamps and dichroic foil installations, the process of revealing hidden digital systems with his "Reporting Device," and the unexpected role of randomness in creating kinetic art. Find a full transcript and more at interfacecafe.com, and subscribe so you don't miss an episode.
Episode Chapters: 01:16 Intro and Background 03:52 The Exchange Between Tech and Creativity 06:04 Breaking Into the Unknown 07:52 Buoy Lamps and the Vermicelleria 12:58 The Materiality of Light 16:12 Bringing Light to a Brutalist Schoolhouse 19:15 The Reporting Device 24:02 Revealing the Unseen 25:49 Anthropomorphic Architecture 29:54 The Role of Randomness 31:54 Does it All Make Sense? 34:34 What Should We Be Focused On? 37:40 Outro | |||
| Facing Our Interfaces: Matías Duarte on the Future of Individualized Design | 15 May 2024 | 00:44:42 | |
This season begins with a special series celebrating ten years since the launch of Material Design, which will explore the inception, evolution, and future of Google's design approach. The first episode features the founder of Material Design and Design VP Matías Duarte, whose work on the system has pushed design forward at Google and across devices everywhere. In their conversation, Liam and Matías unpack how interfaces are made, used, and understood—and identify opportunities to move them further into the future via a highly crafted, individualized design approach. | |||
| Designing Better Code: How Google Engineers Make Coding a Creative Practice | 14 Mar 2023 | 00:42:08 | |
Liam speaks with Googlers Connie Shi, a software engineer on Material Design, and Matvei Malkov, a software engineer on Jetpack Compose, and the trio unpack what makes coding a creative practice, and which creative choices are required when you build a design system for other developers around the world. The wide-ranging conversation turns from complex problem solving and technical logic to the concept of creativity as the question-provoking quality of a thought. | |||
| How Fonts Change the World: Dave Crossland on Digital Type and Emotional Expression | 31 Jan 2023 | 00:36:57 | |
Liam and Google Fonts Specialist Dave Crossland explore what digital type can teach us about digital production, emotional expression, and where we fit in the world as designers; and how – with a little imagination – we might unlock new possibilities. | |||
| Coding (and Decoding) Social Spaces: Judith Donath on the Future of Life Online | 20 Dec 2022 | 00:36:46 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Judith Donath, the founder of MIT's Sociable Media Lab, inventor of e-cards, and author of The Social Machine: Designs for Living Online. Donath's work offers crucial insights into the sociality of digital products and platforms, and the opportunities we have as digital producers to make things that truly meet sociable ends. In the episode, Donath unpacks some of this work, exploring potential futures for life online and the joy of learning (and sharing) something new. | |||
| Fearless Design: Aline Borges on Composition and Creative Career Changes | 22 Nov 2022 | 00:28:36 | |
Liam speaks with Aline Borges, a Zürich-based floral designer who's made the leap from fashion coordination for magazines like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar to independent floral design and installations. The conversation covers what it's like to move between different creative fields (and countries), how to think about composition to tackle almost any creative challenge, and the courage and community it takes to start on a new venture. | |||
| ⏮️ How Machines Help Us See Ourselves: Harvey Moon on Art Made Through Machine Collaboration | 25 Oct 2022 | 00:30:59 | |
In this episode, we revisit a conversation from Season 1 with new media artist Harvey Moon, recorded in his San Francisco studio. Liam and Harvey discuss how Moon's work reveals unseen properties of the world around us, the process of creating one's own creative tools, and the kind of art that's only made possible through collaboration with machines. The conversation expands on ideas about the way the world around us is designed and redesigned, and where that places us as designers. Read the full transcript: https://www.iamli.am/design-notes-podcast/harvey-moon-new-media-artist Subscribe to Design Notes: 👉RSS | |||
| The Impact of Shared Space: Ignacio Ciocchini on Designing NYC's Public Furniture | 11 Oct 2022 | 00:44:44 | |
Liam speaks with streetscape and public space designer Ignacio Ciocchini, who's created much of the public furniture that New Yorkers encounter every single day – from benches that provide personal space, to entire built landscapes for Bryant Park, to chargers for electric vehicles and more. The conversation ranges from the materiality of the built environment, to the ways in which it expands, constrains, and informs our experiences of life and socialization in a city, with a look toward the more human-focused future that Ciocchini envisions. Read the full transcript: https://www.iamli.am/design-notes-podcast/ignacio-ciocchini-nyc-public-furniture Subscribe to Design Notes: 👉RSS | |||
| ⏮️ Learning From Your Virtual Twin: Kerry Murphy on Digital Fashion and Virtual Embodiment | 27 Sep 2022 | 00:23:03 | |
In this episode, we revisit a conversation from Season 1 with Kerry Murphy, co-founder of digital fashion house The Fabricant. We uncover how data are spun into virtual threads, and how virtual embodiment can foster self-actualization. In designing couture that doesn't—or can't—exist in physical space, The Fabricant also explores ideas of embodiment and self-actualization. Murphy pushes these concepts even further, by interacting with his own "virtual twin," composed from 3D-scans of his body. Read the full transcript: https://www.iamli.am/design-notes-podcast/kerry-murphy-founder-the-fabricant Subscribe to Design Notes: 👉RSS | |||
| Digital Anthropology: Tom Boellstorff on How Virtual Worlds Shape Our Actual Lives | 13 Sep 2022 | 00:33:47 | |
Liam speaks to Tom Boellstorff, Anthropologist and UCI Professor, whose ethnographic work in Second Life (documented in his book, Coming of Age in Second Life) provides important insights into how virtual space – and our interface with it – informs and interacts with our lives in actual space. In virtual worlds like Second Life, inhabitants exist only through their own acts of creation, which also serve as a primary mode of experiencing life in virtual space. Full transcript + images: https://www.iamli.am/design-notes-podcast/tom-boellstorff-virtual-anthropology
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| Welcome Back to Design Notes: Season 2 Trailer | 30 Aug 2022 | 00:01:33 | |
It's been a while, but Design Notes is coming back for Season 2 uncovering even more of what inspires and unites us in our work. Make sure to subscribe so you don't miss new interviews with practitioners working on public furniture, the culture of virtual space, and more. Follow @DesignNotespod on Twitter for updates!
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| Design Can't Rely on Logic: Troy Leinster on Type Design and Human Perception | 09 Sep 2025 | 00:45:07 | |
In this episode, I reconnect with my former instructor, type designer and design coach Troy Leinster. Troy shares his journey from graphic design to type design, and explains why learning to make letters makes you a better designer. We also dig into the importance of trusting the human eye over geometry, the productive friction of sketching by hand, and how understanding calligraphy builds a stronger perspective on type design. Troy discusses why, in the age of AI, the most important thing a designer can do is put their personal touch on the work. | |||
| [SF Design Week] Julian Zigerli on Expressive, Un-Gendered Fashion Design | 08 Jun 2021 | 00:33:34 | |
In this episode, part of San Francisco Design Week's Digital Edition, Liam speaks with Julian Zigerli, a designer in Zürich, Switzerland creating clothing that allows everyone to decide how what they wear expresses who they are. In the interview, Zigerli describes how the rich culture of Switzerland impacts his work, what it means when someone asks for "straight" clothes, and how his creative practice adapted in a time of pandemic. Content warning: In this episode, the word "queer" is used in a reclaimed manner.
Find out more about SF Design Week at sfdesignweek.com
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| Theming with Moooi: Creating an Immersive Digital Flagship (2020 Material Design Awards) | 20 Apr 2021 | 00:21:02 | |
This episode is part of a special series of three interviews, recorded remotely with the winners of the 2020 Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Moooi, winning the award for Material Theming, focuses on aesthetic fundamentals like type, color, and imagery to create an immersive and expressive experience for their digital flagship. In the interview, Liam is joined by Margot Gabel and Rémy Barthez taking an in-depth look at how Moooi implemented an award-winning themed experience.
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| Dark Theme with KAYAK: How Dark Mode Revolutionized a Brand's Approach to Color (2020 Material Design Awards) | 20 Apr 2021 | 00:21:16 | |
This episode is part of a special series of three interviews, recorded remotely with the winners of the 2020 Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. KAYAK has taken their comprehensive price comparison and travel booking experience to the next level by translating their brand into a dark theme. In the interview, Liam learns from Aleksandra Safarova and Mike Scopino how building a dark theme revolutionized KAYAK's entire approach to color.
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| Motion Design with Epsy: Using Meaningful Motion for Better Health Outcomes (2020 Material Design Awards) | 20 Apr 2021 | 00:20:15 | |
This episode is part of a special series of three interviews, recorded remotely with the winners of the 2020 Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Epsy uses motion meaningfully, guiding users living with Epilepsy through critical tasks to better their quality of life. In the interview, Liam is joined by Jennifer Stott and Marco Peluso to break down Epsy's approach to designing - and prioritizing - motion.
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| The Surprising Poetry of AI: BJ Best on Teaching Computers to Create Art | 21 Apr 2020 | 00:32:23 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with BJ Best, a poet who teaches computers to do what humans can't in the name of art. His network of ArtyBots is part of a vibrant scene of robots creating, sharing, and collaborating with one another on virtual art. In the interview, Best describes the reflective opportunities and editorial impact created by a bot-created body of work numbering in the tens of thousands.
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| The Magic Question for Creativity: Laurie Rosenwald on Making Mistakes on Purpose | 17 Mar 2020 | 00:30:13 | |
Design Notes is a show about creative work and what it teaches us. In this episode, Liam speaks with illustrator, editorial designer, and author Laurie Rosenwald about how she's managed to cultivate an aesthetic—and a career—around "making mistakes on purpose." Learn how chaos and collage can come together to reveal unexpected creative potential, and let Rosenwald help make sure you're never alone with a blank page. Subscribe to Design Notes 👉RSS | |||
| Learning From Your Virtual Twin: Kerry Murphy on Digital Fashion and Self-Actualization | 18 Feb 2020 | 00:22:17 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Kerry Murphy, co-founder of digital fashion house The Fabricant, to learn how ones and zeros are spun, woven, and stitched into virtual couture. In designing couture that doesn't—or can't—exist in physical space, The Fabricant also explores ideas of embodiment and self-actualization. Murphy pushes these concepts even further, by interacting with his own "virtual twin," composed from 3D-scans of his body.
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| A Prompt for Creative Renewal: David Reinfurt on A New Program for Graphic Design | 21 Jan 2020 | 00:35:26 | |
Design Notes is a show about creative work and what it teaches us. For the first episode of 2020, Liam speaks with David Reinfurt, founder of O-R-G, half of Dexter Sinister, and author of A *New* Program for Graphic Design. Together they explore the fluid notions of personal, corporate, and graphic identity throughout Reinfurt's career, the importance of learning through practice, and the relationship between design and art.
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| Reflectly: Pushing the Boundaries of Material Motion (2019 Material Design Awards) | 26 Nov 2019 | 00:13:39 | |
This episode is part of a special series of four interviews with the winners of this year's Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Reflectly, a unique journaling app, won this year's award for innovation by pushing the boundaries of Material Design and bringing it to life with fluid animations, a novel elevation model, and custom componentry. In the interview, cofounder Jacob Kristensen digs into the foundations of Reflectly and how its experience—from philosophy to specific interactions—came to life. Listen and subscribe to Design Notes 👉RSS | |||
| Ruff: Building an Expressive Brand Identity with Material Theming (2019 Material Design Awards) | 26 Nov 2019 | 00:15:59 | |
This episode is part of a special series of four interviews with the winners of this year's Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Ruff is a focused note-taking app that won this year's award for theming, building an expressive identity through the consistent application of color, typography, and shape. In the interview, Liam and developer/designer Bardi Golriz talk about what it's like to add new features without losing focus, and how Material Theming impacts the process of developing an app. Listen and subscribe to Design Notes 👉RSS | |||
| The User Brings the Confetti: Rob Giampietro on Scaling a Human-Centered Brand | 05 Aug 2025 | 00:43:13 | |
Rob Giampietro, Head of Creative at Notion and former Design Director at MoMA, returns to the show to unpack the story behind Notion Faces, the popular tool that allows users to create their own illustrated avatar. Rob details the project's journey from a beloved internal tradition to a major public launch, including the pivotal decision to scale with human illustrators instead of AI to maintain the brand's unique, handcrafted quality. The conversation explores how the team shifted its focus from "likeness" to "expression," the power of modularity in design systems, and the research process that made the project a success. | |||
| Trip.com: Designing a Universal Travel App for Global Users (2019 Material Design Awards) | 26 Nov 2019 | 00:09:38 | |
This episode is part of a special series of four interviews with the winners of this year's Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Trip.com is a travel app that won this year's award for universality by accounting for users around the world with over a dozen supported languages and custom imagery. The interview unpacks what it's like to build an app for the entire world, and what makes Trip.com a unique experience. Listen and subscribe to Design Notes 👉RSS | |||
| Scripts: Using Creative Interactions to Make Learning Feel Accomplished (2019 Material Design Awards) | 26 Nov 2019 | 00:11:53 | |
This episode is part of a special series of four interviews with the winners of this year's Material Design Awards, exploring what goes into creating an award-winning app. Scripts won this year's award for Experience, with creative interactions, navigation, and content presentation. In the interview, I spoke with the Scripts team about using a color system to create a unique experience while expressing identity, and building interactions that make users feel accomplished right away.
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| The Psychedelic Spark: GMUNK on His Aesthetic and the Importance of Creative Discomfort | 30 Oct 2019 | 00:30:16 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Bradley Munkowitz, also known as designer/director GMUNK, unpacking Munkowitz's scintillating psychedelic aesthetic — inspired by actual psychedelic experiences — and why it's important as a designer to continually challenge and be challenged, maintaining a healthy discomfort with one's own work.
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| Vulnerability, Technology, and Art: Qianqian Ye on Creative Coding and Shared Futures | 01 Oct 2019 | 00:26:40 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with interdisciplinary artist and creative coder Qianqian Ye in her San Francisco studio. The duo traces her journey from wielding calligraphy brushes to building a hand-holding glove, unpacking the vulnerabilities we all share as humans, how creative intent is communicated, and the importance of imagining other futures.
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| How Machines Help Us See Ourselves: Harvey Moon on Collaborating with Technology for Art | 03 Sep 2019 | 00:30:01 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with new media artist Harvey Moon in his San Francisco studio. The duo discuss how Moon's work reveals unseen properties of the world around us, the process of creating one's own creative tools, and the kind of art that's only made possible through collaboration with machines.
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| Art as Survival: Conor Grebel on Using Creative Work to Heal | 06 Aug 2019 | 00:31:12 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Conor Grebel about how lived experiences inform and are conveyed through creative work.
Read a full transcript
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| I Hate Music Videos: Bayonet Records on Sonic Design and Releasing Music on Your Own Terms | 09 Jul 2019 | 00:31:15 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Katie Garcia and Dustin Payseur, who together run independent music label Bayonet Records.
Read a full transcript
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| What We Can Learn From Our Work: Host Liam Spradlin on the Themes of Design Notes | 11 Jun 2019 | 00:32:24 | |
In this episode, guest host Barbara Eldredge turns the tables, interviewing regular host Liam Spradlin about his own creative journey and reflecting on the themes that unite the first 25 episodes of Design Notes.
Read a full transcript
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| The Most Transformative Job in the World: MoMA's Rob Giampietro on Design's Unseen Impact | 14 May 2019 | 00:25:45 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Rob Giampietro, Design Director at the Museum of Modern Art. Giampietro shares his journey from studio designer to design manager, explores the unseen details of a museum experience, and describes the responsibility designers have to create impact. Download a PDF transcript
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| "What Do You See; How Do You Feel?"—Vanity Fair's Clinton Cargill on Visual Storytelling | 16 Apr 2019 | 00:27:51 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Clinton Cargill, the current visual director at Vanity Fair and former photo director at Bloomberg Businessweek. Cargill describes how he mastered the art of critically looking at pictures, what it takes to craft a compelling story with the expressive capabilities of photography, and why intent is central to creative work. Download a PDF transcript
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| True is Better Than New: David Reinfurt on Evolving Graphic Design Education | 01 Jul 2025 | 00:45:02 | |
In this episode, designer, educator, and author David Reinfurt returns to the show to discuss his latest book, A *Co-* Program for Graphic Design. Born from a series of lectures delivered remotely, online, and together with collaborators and cooperators, the new book builds on his earlier "spoken" book, exploring some unexpected and intuitive overlaps between design and the rest of the world around us. In conversation, Liam and David cover the power of hands-on learning, the importance of going against expectations as a designer, and the positionality of design—its closeness to everyday life, how it affects those that encounter it, and how it's taught—and how individual perspective is the real driver of design as a practice.
Episode Chapters: 00:00 Introduction and Background 08:53 Teaching as Performance 14:34 The Role of Collaboration in Design 18:26 Diverse Perspectives in Design Education 21:55 Exploring Design Space and Topology 26:34 Hands-On Learning in Design Education 30:13 Art and Design 32:34 Creating Space for Reflection in Design 36:34 The Evolution of Design Conventions 39:38 The Bait and Switch 42:04 Individual Perspectives in Design | |||
| Owning Your Values: Ksenya Samarskaya on How Typography Encodes and Decodes Identity | 19 Mar 2019 | 00:26:21 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with New York-based type designer Ksenya Samarskaya, exploring how type absorbs influence from its place in time, space, and culture. Samarskaya unpacks how typography represents the histories and complexities of the world around us, while revealing our own identities in the process.
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| You Cannot Be What You Cannot See: Panimation on Building Community in Motion Design | 19 Feb 2019 | 00:32:11 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Bee Grandinetti and Hedvig Ahlberg—two thirds of the trio that founded Punanimation, a community and platform for women, trans, and non-binary folks working with animation and motion design. Download a PDF transcript Subscribe to Design Notes 👉RSS | |||
| Material Design Awards 2018: Winners from Lyft, Anchor & More on Building Expressive Products | 15 Jan 2019 | 00:46:25 | |
In this episode, Liam sits down with the winners of the 2018 Material Design Awards—Anchor, KptnCook, Lyft, and SimpleHabit—to discuss how they each adopted and extended Material to build expressive, inspirational experiences.
Download a PDF transcript
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| "We Should Do Something Together"—Ateljé Sotamaa on the Importance of Friction in Design | 13 Dec 2018 | 00:24:07 | |
Tuuli and Kivi Sotamaa are the brother and sister team behind Ateljé Sotamaa, a studio creating emotionally-appealing objects and holistic architectural environments. In the episode: Tuuli and Kivi Sotamaa recount their very first collaboration (back in 1999!) and discuss a shared interest in experiences that aren't stripped of their friction. Learn more 👉 design.google/podcast | |||
| The Music of Design: Marko Ahtisaari on How Finnish Social Values Shaped Nokia | 13 Dec 2018 | 00:26:36 | |
Marko Ahtisaari is the artistic director of the Helsinki Festival, a former product design lead at Nokia, and co-founder of Dopplr and Sync Project. In the episode: Marko Ahtisaari expands on his journey as a designer and entrepreneur, explaining powerful lessons learned across three continents. By taking a holistic perspective on the Finnish design tradition, Ahtisaari unpacks how the country's societal values shaped its technologies. Learn more 👉 design.google/podcast | |||
| [LIVE] AI, Identity, and Storytelling: Stephanie Dinkins on Befriending a Robot | 13 Dec 2018 | 00:19:40 | |
A transdisciplinary artist, Stephanie Dinkins focuses on AI's intersection with race, gender, and social equity. In the episode, recorded live onstage at SPAN: Stephanie Dinkins unpacks how and why we should actively engage with artificial intelligence. Dinkins also discusses her experience befriending the AI robot Bina48. Learn more 👉 design.google/podcast | |||
| What It's Like to Really Know: James Bridle on Agency in an Age of Complex Technology | 13 Dec 2018 | 00:24:21 | |
James Bridle is an artist and author working across technologies and disciplines. His artworks have been commissioned by galleries and institutions, and exhibited worldwide. In the episode: James Bridle explores the importance of having agency in—and working knowledge of—the complex systems in which we live. Learn more 👉 design.google/podcast | |||
| Asking, "How Does It Make You Feel?"— Isabelle Olsson on Designing Google Hardware | 13 Dec 2018 | 00:24:49 | |
A design director working on Google Home and wearables, Isabelle Olsson also oversees CMF (color, material, and finish) for all Google hardware. In the episode: Isabelle Olsson explains how she discovered the discipline of industrial design and explores the approach that lead to the unique aesthetic of Google hardware. Learn more 👉 design.google/podcast | |||
| Everything Is a Lesson: Jesse Reed on Preserving Historic Brand Standards | 27 Nov 2018 | 00:32:45 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Jesse Reed, identity designer and co-founder of Standards Manual—a publishing imprint known for preserving and republishing historic design style guides and assemblages of designed artifacts. In the interview, Reed explores his experiences working at Pentagram, and how identity design is related to time, truth, and the organizations it ultimately serves. Learn more 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||
| The Aesthetics of Overload: Ryan Snelson on Redesigning MySpace and Experimental UI | 30 Oct 2018 | 00:29:05 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with Ryan Snelson about his experience redesigning MySpace, championing a gritty and expressive experimental aesthetic, and understanding the constraints of technology and design. Learn more 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||
| Material Design Gets Expressive: Inside Google's Emotion-Driven UX Update | 10 Jun 2025 | 00:55:26 | |
This special episode digs into the latest evolution of Google's design system: Material 3 Expressive. Liam talks with Material Design's Android Product Manager Aneesha Kommineni, UX Researcher Michael Gilbert, and Creative Director Andy Stewart about the team's latest emotion-driven UX update. They reveal how this system is grounded in user research and how it offers both developers and users more flexibility. The group also chats about making design more than objective, connecting to users' emotional landscapes, and driving business outcomes — all while considering tooling, usability, accessibility, and more. Stay tuned for upcoming episodes featuring guests like O-R-G's David Reinfurt, type designer Troy Leinster, and more! | |||
| Hidden Design: Sang Mun on Creating the ZXX Typeface to Explore Digital Privacy | 04 Sep 2018 | 00:20:03 | |
In this episode, Liam speaks with interdisciplinary designer Sang Mun of YAW Studio. In the interview—recorded in Seoul, South Korea—Liam and Sang explore how the ZXX typeface, which was born from Sang's experience in special intelligence, tells a story that helps us consider our privacy and the nature of the information that shapes our lives, how accessible tools can empower users, and how to think about the practical constraints we all face as designers. Learn more 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||
| Design, Humor, and Social Change: Libby VanderPloeg on Illustration and Going Viral | 14 Aug 2018 | 00:25:18 | |
In the twelfth episode, Liam speaks with illustrator Libby VanderPloeg about how she relates to her uniquely illustrative work, deciding what to share with the world, and what happens when the work takes on a life of its own. Learn more 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||
| Can Robots Be Curious?: Madeline Gannon on Taming and Reframing Industrial Robots | 10 Jul 2018 | 00:20:09 | |
In the eleventh episode, guest host Aaron Lammer speaks with "robot tamer" and founder of the research studio ATONATON, Madeline Gannon, about how to make robots more approachable, how to design their personalities to work alongside humans as "machinic creatures," and how she created Mimus, an industrial robot outfitted with sensors that bring out its curious personality. Learn more 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||
| Cardboard Carpentry: Alexandra Lange on How Toys and Playgrounds Shape Independent Kids | 11 Jun 2018 | 00:28:31 | |
Guest host Amber Bravo speaks with architecture critic and author Alexandra Lange about her new book, The Design of Childhood: How the Material World Shapes Independent Kids.
Together, they examine how design changes childhood—discussing everything from street design and playgrounds, to what makes building blocks a "good" toy, and why cardboard is an inviting canvas for creative exploration.
Show notes 👉 https://design.google/podcasts | |||