His work has been published in Graphis, Idea, Print, California Art Direction, Step-by-Step, and Dictionary of Graphic Images.
He has won numerous awards and recognition from the Society of Illustrators, AIGA and Art Directors Club.
[3] Growing up, Goslin was interested in ministry and law, particularly as a defense attorney ("Clarence Darrow was a great hero of mine.")
Goslin's career began at the studio of American graphic design pioneer Lester Beall in Brookfield, Connecticut (1954–1958).
"[1] As a professor, Goslin taught graphic design and illustration by assigning news clippings with real but unusual stories.
Goslin stressed the importance of exploring different ways to communicate including media like performance art or video.)
Occasionally, Goslin would "write a ringer" and assign the clipping unbeknownst to his students, including one example about the Roman Coliseum becoming Rome's first shopping mall.
There's one from the New York Times about an automotive product called "Nuance" which gives interiors that "new car smell:" Design an advertisement for this pump spray invention.
He found "New York [graphic design] studios... expensive" and "trashy" and preferred the simplicity of his apartment.