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May 13, 2008

Why graphic designers are like hairdressers.

More and more I'm convinced that graphic designers are like hairdressers. Graphic design agencies are like hairdressing salons.

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I believe you could open a hairdressing salon in any town in Britain and you would make money. If you were sensible and kept on top of things you could make a nice living. Nice house, nice car, two holidays a year. All that.

I also believe there could be three hairdressers in this same town and they would all make money. All have nice cars. Two holidays. That's all perfectly possible.

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I also believe you could open a graphic design agency in any town in Britain and you would make money. If you were sensible and kept on top of things you could make a nice living. Nice house, nice car, two holidays a year. All that.

I also believe there could be three graphic design agencies in this same town and they would all make money. All have nice cars. Two holidays. That's all perfectly possible.

Img_0059

You could repeat this formula up and down the country and it would still work. Just because there's already a hairdresser in town, it's no barrier to setting up another one.

Essentially all of these hairdressers will be of roughly the same quality. You could walk into to any of them, anywhere in the country, and get roughly the same haircut for roughly the same price. From time to time some of them will win awards and some of them will have good patches, but essentially, they're all just as competent.

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Every once in a while one of these salons will become very well known. Famous, even. That's because approximately a couple of percent of everything will always be very good. The rest will be average. It's the same with graphic design.

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From time to time some of these salons, or agencies, will go bust. Such is life. The staff move on, the good ones start up on their own, taking the good customers with them.

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With the right financing and the right management a few of these salons could expand and go nationwide, maybe even international. But this will be rare, because essentially the business model isn't scalable.

According to the Design Council, 95% of design consultancies have less than 5 staff and a turnover of less than £250k a year. I wonder if The Hairdressing Council have similar stats?

Imagine a hairdressing salon pitching for your custom, how would they differentiate themselves? Could they differentiate themselves? If Bob cut your hair at British Hairways, would you change supplier when he moved to Curl Up And Dye? If The Cutting Corner was busy one Saturday and you needed a haircut quick would you chance it and get it done at Head Masters? Apply that thinking to your agency and your clients. Ever wonder why they find pitches so confusing? Worth thinking about that.

I don't know if this is a good thing or a bad thing. It's just something I've noticed. What do you think?

May 01, 2008

Good agency website shock

I love this.

Modernista_main

Now, there are probably people who hate it. That's fine. I like it and this is my playground with my rules.

Instead of building the usual wank agency website Modernista! have utilised the tools of web 2.0.  So the work is shown through Flickr.

Modernista

Easy to use, easy to find, easy to access, easy to comment on, easy to bookmark, easy to share. good, good, good.

The About Us page utilises Wikipedia.

Modernista2

The best way to get what I'm on about is to take a look at the site.

Found via this month's issue of Creative Review which is also The Annual issue and very good. In the shops now.


Feb 11, 2008

Do all the best creative organisations end with an M?

This is the best post I've never written.

I was thinking about Pentagram, Archigram and Magnum and how they've all got similar co-operative style set ups. They're all at the top of their field. They've all got great longevity. And they all end in M, which is probably important.

So I thought I'd write about this.

But the thing is I don't really know enough about all of the organisations. So I asked some experts to write a few words on the structure of each organisation and how that helps contribute to their success. The experts don't need any introduction. A huge thank you to each of them.

You can't help but be inspired and excited by reading all of these texts.

The passion of the protagonists and the power of the collective is evident in each organisation. Investigate further and you'll see that the quality of the work is incredible and consistent.

A few things stand out for me. Firstly they all seem to have been formed out of an honest idea to create amazing work. Secondly they all seem to have come to the same conclusion about the kind of organisation which begets superior work and thirdly that structure has been copied by significantly few others.

So read the stuff below and like me you'll find yourself wanting work in an organistation that pushes the boundaries, puts creative doers at it's heart, where excellence perpetuates and which ends in M.

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Henrietta Thompson on Magnum

Magnum was a war baby. Founded by four photographers just back from the frontlines in 1947 Magnum Photos resulted from a powerful what-the-hell manifesto, and despite celebrating its 60th birthday last year, its vision is as still just as strong as ever.

Magnumall
Picture taken from the Magnum website, usual rules apply.


Robert Capa, David –Chim- Seymour, Henri Cartier-Bresson and George Rodger established Magnum in an effort to change in the way photography was traded. In order to empower photojournalists to work truly creatively, without the constraints of demanding managing agents and editors Mangum made a departure from conventional practice in two ways: Firstly, the necessary staff would exist to support (rather than direct) the photographers. Secondly, the authors of the imagery held the copyright - not the magazines, so if a photographer was published in Paris Match, Magnum could still then sell the same photographs to Life magazine, say, or the Picture Post. This meant that the photographer would gain the means to work on new projects even without an assignment. More importantly, it meant that photojournalism would be recognized as the artform it was.

Lon6978
Picture by Martin Parr, taken from the Magnum website, usual rules apply.

With the flexibility to choose their own stories (and to work for long as it took to get the right shot) the photojournalism being processed by Magnum was – and is still – very different to that of a photographer on commission: there is a point of view to the stories that goes far beyond the purposes of event recording. “We often photograph events that are called 'news' ," Cartier-Bresson told Byron Dobell of "Popular Photography" magazine in 1957, " Life isn't made of stories that you cut into slices like an apple pie. There's no standard way of approaching a story. We have to evoke a situation, a truth. This is the poetry of life's reality."

Nyc17120
Picture by Elliot Erwitt, taken from the Magnum website, usual rules apply.


Magnum today is still such a cooperative, operating from offices in London, New York, Paris and Tokyo - and providing photographs to the world’s media, galleries and museums. It is entirely owned by the photographers it represents and , if you see an iconic image of any significant world event since the Spanish civil war and are not sure who took it, chances are it was a Magnum photographer.

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Michael Bierut on Pentagram


Idpublictheater

The Public Theater, New York identity by Pentagram, usual rules apply.


Pentagram's structure is based on a few simple principals. First, the first is structured around its partners, each of whom runs an autonomous team of designers who are dedicated to working on that partner's projects. This is meant to replicate the creative intensity of a small design office, where everyone is focused on the work. Second, all of the partners are designers. There are no partners who are managers, or strategists, or account people. That means that while money is important -- the partners have to be good businesspeople, after all, since they can't pass that responsibility off -- the attention of the firm is on design, not money.

Fashioncenter
The Fashion Center information kiosk by Pentagram, usual rules apply.

Third, the partners are all equal, regardless of seniority. Finally, the partners are diverse. There are architects, product designers and new media designers along with the graphic designers, and even the graphic designers have wildly divergent styles. This means that there are many advantages in working collaboratively.

These principals are surprisingly unchanged since firm's founding in 1972. I think they've guaranteed a certain amount of stability, a longstanding commitment to good design, and slow but steady growth.

Saksfifthave
Saks Fifth Avenue Identity by Pentagram, usual rules apply.

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Dan Hill on the "Archigram - What - Organisation - You - Must - Be - Joking - Mate"


The bare facts are these. Six youngish men come together in various flats in Hampstead, London, in the early 1960s. They produce a magazine-like publication Archigram, that lasted from 1961 to 1970 (roughly), and the firm that had grown out of it Archigram Architects, lasts until 1975. 900 drawings are produced along the way, yet assessed In terms of built projects they produce only a playground in Milton Keynes and a swimming pool for Rod Stewart. If that. And yet they influence architecture profoundly. Their work is the thing, and should be pored over time and time again (see refs. below), but the question here is whether their organisational structure aided this extraordinary state of affairs.

Archigram4
Archigram pictures from all over the place, usual rules apply.

The 'rock group' motif attached to Archigram is a little overplayed - generally the analogy goes they were "the Beatles of architecture", a lazy comparison based around their perceived insouciance, iconoclasm and psychedelic visuals, exploding out of a then-stuffy trade. "A necessary irritant" as Barry Curtis called them. Firstly, they were of course far better than the wildly overrated Beatles. (Even musically: in the retrospective at the Design Museum a few years ago, the visitor was confronted with The Yes Album playing, from a messy mock-up of their studio, but it really should've been Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler.)

Secondly, the key point of difference is that they heavily influenced without making buildings. Could a band influence as much without releasing a record? In this, they were part of a tradition of un-built but visionary work that makes architecture and urbanism almost unique in design practice. So what set them apart was the publishing.

That espoused a take on modernism informed by a generally positive reaction to the technology and media that had which emerged, with necessary inventiveness, from WWII, a conflict that was still front of most people's minds, self-evident in the half-shattered cities around them. This optimism and invention is then allied to the 'post-scarcity' culture that emerges in the late-'50s, as they cut and paste the space race onto colour telly and pop-art and planned obsolescence, spray-painting structural engineering with beat poetry and Harold Wilson's 'white heat of technology', fusing Monty Python montage into avant-garde internationalist happenings in, wait for it, Folkestone. In pursuing the unbuilt, ephemeral, temporary and informational, they are precursors for a version of the 21st century (at least the one unaffected by peak oil).

Their proposals for Instant, Walking or Plug-In Cities, Suitaloons and Living Pods, were radical, fluid, malleable, intimate and transient - "tune up, clip on, plug in" into "rooms (that) expand infinitely. Our walls dissolve into impermeable mists or into the imagery of stories and fables ...".

Walking_city_1
The Walking City by Archigram. Pictures from all over the place, usual rules apply.

Yet their own structure remained relatively solid. If not the band, the architectural practice was essentially their recognisable model, though that is usually just as rife with splits, egos, and partners flouncing out over non-musical differences. There seems to have been little of that in Archigram's dissolution. Only that a large scheme in Monte Carlo fell through, and their fabric couldn't stretch over the distance from Folkestone to Los Angeles, which is a long way geographically but even further culturally.

So there's a disparity between their projects - "an architecture that twitched ... was responsive to people" - and their own structure. Certainly, it seems to have been fairly disorganised. Reyner Banham called them, the "Archigram-What-Organisation-You-Must-Be-Joking-Mate". But no more so than for many other architects.

The two groups of three came together to form six (three out of the art schools, and the other three working at the innovative London County Council). In a recent interview, the group's Peter Cook listed their roles:

" I was the enthusiast. Mike Webb was the genius. Ron [Herron] was the fantastically fluent member. Warren [Chalk] was the warrior. David [Greene] the poet. Dennis [Crompton] was the technologist. And I was the beaver, the operational person. Everybody overlaps, but that's the simplified version."

So we see the specialist-meets-multidisciplinary brew common to many micro firms. Though they were all essentially trained in the same master discipline, Cook points out they ranged over 10 years in age and came from different schools - "There was a hint of internal competitiveness. So it was rather like a studio in a college would be—looking over the shoulder of the other and thinking, "That's interesting, now I must do something, too."

The fact they were rarely troubled by praxis may have enabled the six-person team to remain six - to attempt to build much of what they proposed would have inevitably meant a certain fraying at the edges, as this highly complex work now tends to involve numerous specialists. Plus of course the messy necessity of clients.  Firms actually approaching their ideas in built form these days - arguably OMA/AMO, Arup, MVRDV, Foster, Rogers, Herzog + De Meuron, Future Systems, Morphosis and Atelier Bow Wow perhaps - are larger, highly diverse, often corporate structures.

Archigramcover
Archigram pictures from all over the place, usual rules apply.

But as an ideas generator, this 6-person team of occasionally spiky, overlapping semi-specialists, unified by a single trade, medium and sensibility, was immensely productive. Given that medium was publishing, and their trade ideas, it was also immensely flexible. They took to heart the maxim, perhaps after Cedric Price, that "when you are looking for a solution to what you have been told is an architectural problem - remember, the solution may not be a building."

Cook, the most vocal member today, is slippery on who was actually in the office, doing what. But also notes that the "untidy structure", as he called it, meant they've never really stopped as well. As they transcend a firm and become more of a genre, they become less of an organisation and more of an idea.

If we can get that fluid with things, a key part of their organisation not often articulated might be the umbrella. In a sense, they were part of an un-named and equally loosely-aligned multidisciplinary movement, with Cedric Price, Eduardo Paolozzi, Richard Hamilton, James Stirling, Buckminster Fuller, Reyner Banham and The Smithsons hovering over the group as some kind of unlikely beneficent chorus. Other firms or movements, such as Italy's Superstudio, Japan's Metabolists, fore-runners Team X, are also part of this scene. In this, a fluid membrane of intellect surrounded the group, through which ideas could be tested, progressed, translated or deleted.  A jellyfish-like structure comes to mind, a translucent, flexible dome of thinking, floating over a smallish core body.

This was not a formal organisation at all - barely even a movement, just partly-shared sensibilities - but enabled a rich loam for fertilising ideas, and created a purpose and direction for the work. It's difficult to see equivalents today. Might this layered umbrella structure be the important factor? They might have called it the 'organisation gloop'.

Archigramcollage
Archigram pictures from all over the place, usual rules apply.

Cook asserts "the strength of Archigram was surely its layers of inconsistent parts, keeping going a continual fascination with each other. " So within the gloop, this fascination holds the core. It's almost no more than a sudden freeze-frame on a longer timeline, a group of people coalescing around a way of thinking, as much as doing. They were a purely informational organisation, as close to media, marketing, branding, banking or academia as to architecture, as was their work.

So perhaps the essence to extract from Archigram's organisation was not in their own structure, but in the structure of the buildings they proposed - an organisation that twitches, is responsive to people; an organisation that coalesces, exists briefly, and then is gone, existing only in time; organisations that can expand infinitely, or dissolve into stories and fables; organisations in which the function can switch fluidly; organisations with a permeable skin ... Really, you could take Archigram's work and find and replace the words 'built environment' or 'architecture' or 'city' with the word 'organisation', and that would give you a truly innovative structure indeed.

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References:

Archigram
Archigram.net
Archigram [Wikipedia]
Concerning Archigram - Dennis Crompton (ed.)
Archigram - Peter Cook (ed.)
Archigram: Architecture without Architecture - Simon Sadler
Interview with Sir Peter Cook [Architectural Record]

Pentagram
Pentagram Design
Paula Scher's Family Of Men diagram / video
Pentagram Blog
Pentagram [Wikipedia]

Pentagram Publications
Alan Fletcher biog with some Pentagram history

Magnum
Magnum Photo
Magnum Blog
Magnum [Wikipedia]

Sep 13, 2007

Hand Written Letter Project

Do you remember a while ago, Craig from The Chase asked me to send him a hand written letter?

Here's what I sent back.

22_letterdesignconspiracy

He's scanned all the responses he received and uploaded them here. He's had an absolutely amazing response. There are letters from Wim Crouwel, Daniel Eatock, The Sagmeister, Tom Geismar, Milton Glaser, Wally Olins, Aziz Cami from The Partners, Alistair Sim from LOVE, Simon From Poke,  Lewis Moberly, Alan Dye from NB:Studio, Phil Carter from Carter Wong Tomlin, Harry Pearce from Pentagram and many, many more. Have a look at them all here.

I know I'm biased, but I think our letterhead looks bloody brilliant amongst that lot.

Craig_letters

Aug 28, 2007

Ethical Policy

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Thoughtful have an ethical policy.

It's on the website where everyone can look at it. We bank with the Co-op and so when asked we use their ethical policy as a guide to these issues. But we don't talk about it on our website.

Does anyone know of any graphic design companies (small or large) with an ethical policy?

Aug 23, 2007

Whizz Mail Here

Whilst we're on the subject of WMH. They have some nice stationery.

Wmhstuff

Churnmore

How many of us have sat in meetings that started like this.

Churn_flip

I've just finished reading this excellent book by Richard Murray from Williams Murray Hamm. It's a hilarious little tale of the rebrand of a leading 'yellow fat' Churnmore. It's cute and clever and doesn't take itself seriously. It even looks like a tub of 'yellow fat'.

Cover

Guswalton

No one escapes the satire; designers, ad agencies, brand experts, brand managers, innovation companies.

Branding_iron

Openminds

It's one of those books that's a little too close to the truth for comfort, 'Play Angel's Advocate' is brilliant and reminded me of an agency that I heard mention 'Crazytivity' last week.

It's well worth a read. You can buy it here. You can't borrow mine I'm afraid, I want to keep it handy in the office.

May 22, 2007

British Railways Board Environment Identity Scheme

Yellowandbluesquares

Do you remember this post where I tried, in vain, to find out more about "the British Rail train identification system that won loads of awards and they always used to go on about when I was at college"?

David, who is good at remembering these kinda things, thought that the identity system was designed by Roundel in the 80's.

Looking through an old D&AD annual at the weekend I have finally found out the truth about the mysterious scheme! David was correct that it was designed by Roundel in 1989. Here's the full list of actors.

Rwblogos2
Is Jane Priestman related to Paul Priestman?

And here's the D&AD Annual spread.

Rwblogos

According to the splendid C58LG website I've found out that the individual symbols were based on the major commodity carried by that particular bit of the business. They also explain that the top left of the symbols were designed to look like an F, for freight. Although the F is easier to see in the first picture above.

A_railfreight_sectors
 
Nice aren't they? I like them a lot.

C58LG go on to say:

"The Coal sector logo (black diamonds) represents coal.

The Construction logo (blue/yellow squares) represents building blocks.

The Metals logo (blue/yellow chevrons) represents corrugated iron.

The Petroleum logo (blue/yellow wavy lines) represents the fluid nature of the oil.

From what we understand, the Railfreight Distribution (RfD) logo (red diamonds/yellow) was supposed to show the four corners of the UK, but on the other hand, it might well simply be a design not based on anything…!"

Yes, the 'four corners of the UK' is a bit tenuous.

Apparently Roundel also designed a series of Depot Plaques for each of the major maintenance depots, some based on staff suggestions. They're interesting too, but I don't really have any strong affection for them.

Depot_plagues
Another great website called DepotPlaques.com has much more information on this. Bizarrely they claim that Roundel still own the copyright to the designs which means that replica plaques "are not currently legally produced". I wonder if that is (still) true?

The scheme didn't win a D&AD award, in fact it looks as though only the 'Environment Identity Guide' made it into the Book. 1989, page 217 should you fancy having a look yourself.

Apr 18, 2007

Luxford Advertising

I used to work here. It was a pharmaceutical advertising agency called Luxford Advertising. It's long since gone now. It didn't go bust, the Chairman just decided to close it one day. Well, he didn't just wake up one morning and decide to close it, he put a bit more thought into it than that.

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Kingsley and April once heard Paul Smith say that his dream is to one day just close all the Paul Smith shops. Put up a sign that says, 'thanks for your custom, we are now closed'.

Anyway, that picture up there used to be the Boardroom. Now it's the waiting room for Charles Worthington hairdressers. I left Luxford in 2000 and it closed in 2004, I think. There were around 25 staff and they did everything from DM to TV, but mainly print ads. The agency was based in a lovely Georgian (?) terrace that's now just round the corner from our office. When someone told me it had become Charles Worthington's gaff I wondered round for a look.

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This used to be the basement. It still is a basement. It used to house two copywriters, an art director and a creative secretary.

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This used to be reception. Reception was on the 1st floor (that's one above ground for my US visitors) which used to annoy the hell out of me. Receptions should be on the ground floor. Obviously.

Through that door, top left used to be the photocopier and where the nail varnish type stuff is used to sit the fax machine.

It was very odd going back. So many memories, so many visual memories smashed by CH's architect. The place looks really nice, by the way.

If you're reading this and you used to work at Luxford, leave a comment below.

Dec 21, 2006

The Howies Effect?



Probably not if you read this.

 

Dec 06, 2006

News (not quite breaking)

Bit slow to pick up on this, but Loewy have bought Williams Murray Hamm.

I know Richard at WMH and Lucy at Loewy and I can imagine everyone is very excited about this deal. WMH are one of my favourite design consultancies and this deal is a big signal that Loewy mean business.

Right. I think I need to ring Richard and Lucy...

Nov 21, 2006

The Story Of A Blog Post 2

I was half watching CSI New York which is no way as good as the Vegas one and half checking Design Observer which is great at the moment to see if they had linked to my No10 post like Creative Review have when I read about the RCA Secret project which made me think that I must go to that and then I started looking at the RCA website absentmindedly thinking that I'd like to do an MA one day when I probably wouldn't and then I looked at the list of visiting lecturers and I Googled Daniel Eatock thinking his site would be a load of bollocks and his site is a bit wank but actually really interesting and there's loads of good work there which is what it's all about really when I saw this Pantone Pen Print which is brilliant and so I thought I'd share it with you.

Pantone_pen_print02

Pantone_pen_print
All pictures from Daniel Eatock's site. Usual stuff applies.

The first Story Of A Blog Post is here.

Nov 16, 2006

Our letterheads

A while ago over on we're as disappointed as you are I promised I'd upload our letterheads as they're a in a similar vain to these lovely things. A teeny weeny bit similar.

Oldletterhead

So here we are.

Tdc_letterheads_all

When we needed some new letterheads we thought about how we use them. Obviously we don't send many letters any more. We're more likely to send a note with a CD or some samples or something. In the Old Days 1.0 that would be called a Compliment Slip but decided to do a letterhead that allows you to type or scribble something short and sweet.

Tdc_arrow
(click to make bigger - the photos are pretty bad, sorry about that)

We use this one a lot and it's one of my favourites. Sometimes we have to send longer letters in which case we'd use this one.

Tdc_orange

Very rarely, but often enough to print a letterhead, we may have to write something sensible and formal. In that case we'd use this baby.

Tdc_green

I don't think you can read the text, but basically it says that you won't find any bollocks like Brandrama or Brandscape here. Just vital information like the stuff found in this letter.

Lastly we have one especially for invoices. I'm very fond of this one too.

Tdc_piggybank

We were trying to have a little fun with these pieces of communication. To make the recipient smile. If you can make some lonely soul in a procurement office smile you must be doing something right, right? I hope they have the same playful nature as the ones Russell refers to.

The other thing you should know is that we have no logo. Everything we do has to say The Design Conspiracy on it and it has to be clear that the 'thing' could only have come from us.

What do you think?

Nov 03, 2006

Great job available

Poke are looking for a Creative Director, which strikes me as a pretty bloody good job. Read more here.

Pokeweb

Sep 29, 2006

Pentagram have a blog

http://blog.pentagram.com/

Sep 28, 2006

Paula Scher

Paula Scher, do you know who she is? You ought to.

Why? Here's three simple reasons why.

1. Fast Company say "you may never have heard of Paula Scher, but it's nearly impossible not to know her work. Every time you pass a Citibank ATM or hand over one of its credit cards with the iconic red-arched "Citi" logo, you're in her orbit. When you open a box from Tiffany, with its slender, elegant typeface, you're decoding a message she has sent you. If you... are charmed by the signs on the New York subway for the Metropolitan Opera... you're under the spell of this astonishingly versatile, formidably talented designer."

2. It's still criminally rare to meet a successful woman designer and even rarer to find one who is a director or has equity in a design business which makes that fact that she's a Pentagram partner all the more remarkable.

3. She does stuff like this.

Paula1

(Picture taken from loads of sources, but no doubt owned by Pentagram or Public Theatre  - huge thanks, usual stuff applies.)

There's a great article about her on Fast Company. Well worth a read.

Sep 11, 2006

Celsius

Checking my inbound links (as you do) I found the Celsius website. They've kindly linked to me.

They're a design firm. The work is good, better than average, but what really struck me was the website. It's blissfully simple. Most (like 99%) of design company websites are fucking awful. Really. They almost always start with a flash intro, they are almost always difficult to navigate and they're almost always full of bullshit. Celsius isn't like that, it's user friendly, simple and refreshingly bullshit free. Not sure about the recipe though.

Celsiuswebsite

This reminds me that I keep meaning to post a list of design firms I admire. Must do that soon.

Aug 23, 2006

The view from meeting room three at WCRS

Or Engine, or whatever they're called these days.

Wcrs_two_1

Jul 27, 2006

Blogging, the internet and life (part 3)

Oia

Can’t write about the interweb without giving Russell's new thing a bit of a plug. Him and few chums have set up what they endearingly call a global small business. Open Intelligence Agency will do all kinds of clever, planning type stuff.

Oia_eyes_tag

I love the new identity. It really feels un-agency like which is great. It feels flexible, witty, cute (in a good way), friendly and different. All good things for an identity to be. It was done by Stefan at 344 Design.

David_jesse_squids_dsc00805

They don’t have a corporate website, just one html page and four blogs.

Blogging, the internet and life (part 2)

I’m always reading innocent’s and Wieden + Kennedy’s blogs. Both of them are loads better than their main sites. Loads better. So why do they bother with a traditional site? I wish they didn’t.

We’re having this discussion in our office at the moment, so I’m very familiar with the arguments. Part of our website is almost a blog anyway, so why don’t we just have a blog. Just one blog. A blog is searchable, has a nice structure which shows your growth over the years, it has personality and it shows real emotion.

What do you think?

Jul 18, 2006

Why should we not go to work?

Good people, I wonder if you can help.

Tomorrow is supposed to be the hottest day for a trillion years. So naturally we're trying to find a way to not go to work. We want to spend the day in the park, or the pool, or on the terrace, or just wondering about. But not working.

Thing is, we kinda feel that we need a decent excuse not to work. And we don't really think "the hottest day for a trillion years" is good enough on it's own.

So, anyone got any great ideas why we should not go to work? Comments please.

Jun 18, 2006

Dodging Exhibition Security

Spent a really enjoyable day visiting two exhibitions, Future City at the Barbican and the Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts.

Actually I spent the day trying to dodge exhibition security who were trying to stop me taking pictures, hence some of the photos look very surreptitious.

First off, Future City. I love these kind of architecture exhibitions, but I'm aware they are largely pretentious nonsense. Some of the buildings on display are simply ridiculous. Like the architects are rebelling against the identikit rubbish they design for the rest of the year and displaying some crazy shit to make up for it.

Img_1053
Only architects can get away with this sort of stuff

The actual exhibition looked brilliant. Exhibition design by Foreign Office Architects and all the graphics by Studio Myerscough.

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Some of the 'explanations' were printed on to these great poster style things.

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Decent exhibition, although I'm not really sure what it hoped to achieve. Too expensive at £8. It reminded me of Archigram, so I'll post more about that in the next week.

I love the Barbican, it's so wonderfully odd. Whenever I'm there, I always feel like I'm the only person there. Do you ever feel like that?

They've got these great new signs by Studio Myerscough.

Img_1043

On to the Royal Academy, another place I'm very fond of, and to the Summer Exhibition. I love the Summer Exhibition and I've been every year for years and years. They're double strict on the photo side of things, so it was a little harder.

Their exhibition graphics were crap. But that's not really the point with this one.

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I love the way they cram all the pictures in. They should do this with more exhibitions.

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Some great stuff from Patrick Caulfield. Really nice graphic feel to them.

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All in all, a good, inspiring day.

Jun 12, 2006

Research, insight, common sense, usability, design, whatever.

I've always liked John Sorrell. I sat on a panel with him once. Except that he never turned up.

He now runs a thing called the Sorrell Foundation. They have just finished this fantastic project called Joined Up Design For Schools and they're starting one called Joined Up Design For Health.

What's interesting is that this is where they're starting from.

Thisiswhat
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Call that what you like, research, insight, common sense, usability, design, whatever. This is what it all comes down to. These people are designers, researchers, planners, architects, geniuses - all you have to do is make their half thoughts into real tangible stuff.

That's where the magic comes in.

May 12, 2006

Why Lovemarks Are Bollocks

(or How Many Super Brands Can There Be?)

When Lovemarks first came out, I thought it was a reasonable concept. There are some brands that people love so much they'd have them as tattoos; Apple, Nike, Coca Cola, Harley Davidson are all good example of this.

When Superbrands first came I thought that was a good thing too.

But the problem with all these things is that they just include too many brands. Far, far too many.

Here's a few Superbrands. Just a few you understand.

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And here's 20 Lovemarks from the Top 200.

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The Top 200! There are a lot more than 200, but these are the Top 200! Ridiculous!

How many super brands are there really? If we want to take Lovemarks and Superbrands seriously, and thus give the rankings some value, surely there are only around 20 or so in the world. I'm talking about big, big iconic brands. Disney. Coca Cola. Ferrari.

Not bloody Ace of Base.

May 02, 2006

A book. 10 years ago.

Designers

More finds from my old scrapbook (stop me if all this reminiscing is getting a little boring).

About 10 years ago I had this idea for a book. It was a crap idea and it never went anywhere. But I did compile a list of people I would like to contribute. So this is kind of a list  of the Top 30 or so graphic designers from ten years ago. As decided by me.

Most of these people would be on that list if I wrote it again today (there would be additions obviously). Quite a few of them I've met now, which is a bit odd.

Apr 25, 2006

A Tale of Two Studios

I’ve just read a fascinating article on the AGDA website. (AGDA stands for the Australian Graphic Design Association.) You will especially find this interesting if you run a design consultancy.

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The article is a comparison of the organisational structures of Pentagram and Wolff Olins. It was written by Lucy Elliot in 1999. Lucy won some sort of prize (I think) to visit these consultancies and write this article.

Obviously Pentagram is organised around the Partners and Wolff Olins is run like most companies with Managers, Managing Director and Chairman etc. She says that Pentagram’s organisational structure is like a spiders web with the partner acting as the big spider in the middle. Wolff Olins’ structure is like a net with all the employees joined together like the links of the net.

About Pentagram Lucy asks, “whether the partnership is equipped to take on the future.” She writes, “one former designer suggests that ‘it should die peacefully. It has made its mark’”.

“The problem at the moment is that while the Pentagram is struggling to find new partners to fit this culture, the existing partners are clinging to old views.”

About Wolff Olins she writes, “The culture is based around the task which respects the contributions and talent of individuals.”

“Wolff Olins has weathered its maturity and is currently in a rejuvenation phase.”

“The latest source of culture comes from the new. New leaders, new clients and new employees. This shows an invigorated team progressing confidently without the founders.”

Interesting isn’t it? Especially as that article was written in 1999. Surely Wolff Olins’ fortunes have declined since then whilst Pentagram’s haven’t risen but have stayed largely the same. This is the secret of Pentagram’s success. Year after year fashionable design companies come and go, hot shots get cold and stars fade. Pentagram keeps going. Still number 1 in that creativity chart Design Week do. Still winning