“Good design aims to promote those features and values that are timeless. Truly great design embodies them in a way that cannot be forgotten.”
- David Bushell
Dear Photograph is a lovely blog where people submit photographs of old photos taken over the original. Browsing through the pictures, my mind started wondering how these nostalgic photos have a connection to design.
Our job as designers is to build meaningful associations and connections between people. Designers achieve experiences of emotional feeling that have a lasting effect; an experience full of purpose and meaning.
Many of the captions under the photos express feelings of lost happiness, hardship and failed love – all emotions that everyone has experienced at some point in their life. The connection between memory and experiences is like a node on a branch on a tree. When our mind loses a connection, these memories and feelings are forgotten and sometimes fade completely. When someone is exposed to an action that requires them to rekindle these memories, the node is re-connected and becomes meaningful.
Design will resonate with people on different levels because of past occurrences and the intensity of these memories. Although we could never facilitate all the possible reactions to a design, we can become more aware of how we respond to certain situations of nostalgia.
I hope you appreciate the pictures below. Not only do the photographs look interesting at first glance, but the meaning behind the photo makes it beautiful.

As the New Year marks the passage of time, so do my childhood memories in my parent’s home. They will be selling their house and the memories will fade to black and white, but they will always be kept, safely wrapped with love, in my heart.

New Year’s resolutions and 30 years gone by…what was that little boy inside of me thinking about so long ago? I hope I never quit chasing that little boy’s dreams. It’s what matters most.


It’s funny, the sense of nostalgia I feel when looking at these photos. I have always been negative towards having my photo taken, and do not have any family photos’ from my youth.
As I grow older, and come to understand, and respect, the Emotional aspect of design, I find myself wishing I had these printed pieces of memory. Also, a great motivation for my current project.
Thank you for mentioning Dear Photograph, it’s definitely going in my Bookmarks bar. Another piece of the associative design puzzle (not to mention a deeper look into my own feelings.. something I’ve always avoided).
The thoughts and mood become that much more potent for me as I type this, thanks to your DMX mix I’m listening to (Killer playlist by the way!). Great Blog
~Sun