If you're into Google Doodles then Micheal Lopez is your very own Santa.
Lopez is responsible for Google's Doodles, those delightful illustrations that crop up over the course of the year to celebrate holidays, pop-cultural moments, civic landmarks and scientific achievements. But the most highly anticipated Doodle of them all must be Google's very own holiday card, which launched at 9.00am ET Thursday and will stay up on the home page until Christmas is over.
The 30-year-old's concept (which took five artists roughly 250 hours to complete) was to show the famed logo via 17 interactive portraits of holiday scenes from around the world. Lopez wanted to roll it out over three days, ending on Christmas Day itself. But the powers that be had other ideas as they asked for the Doodle to go up in its entirety, and thus the six month process suddenly had a rather frantic finish.
Even Lopez had to concede that a Christmas opening might diminish the amount of people who would enjoy the fruits of his labor, including those close to home. "I thought, 'Is my mom going to be available to play this on Christmas Day?'" he said. "The answer is, no, she'll be making me food!"
And so, Mrs. Lopez, as well as the rest of the world, will be able to digest her son's latest creation at leisure. Merry Doodling everyone. (via WSJ)
Lopez is responsible for Google's Doodles, those delightful illustrations that crop up over the course of the year to celebrate holidays, pop-cultural moments, civic landmarks and scientific achievements. But the most highly anticipated Doodle of them all must be Google's very own holiday card, which launched at 9.00am ET Thursday and will stay up on the home page until Christmas is over.
The 30-year-old's concept (which took five artists roughly 250 hours to complete) was to show the famed logo via 17 interactive portraits of holiday scenes from around the world. Lopez wanted to roll it out over three days, ending on Christmas Day itself. But the powers that be had other ideas as they asked for the Doodle to go up in its entirety, and thus the six month process suddenly had a rather frantic finish.
Even Lopez had to concede that a Christmas opening might diminish the amount of people who would enjoy the fruits of his labor, including those close to home. "I thought, 'Is my mom going to be available to play this on Christmas Day?'" he said. "The answer is, no, she'll be making me food!"
And so, Mrs. Lopez, as well as the rest of the world, will be able to digest her son's latest creation at leisure. Merry Doodling everyone. (via WSJ)