Jeff is looking for a "designer or studio that is fluent in Arabic and English design". Can anyone help?
Email him (not me) over here. Thanks
Jeff is looking for a "designer or studio that is fluent in Arabic and English design". Can anyone help?
Email him (not me) over here. Thanks
Posted at 12:11 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Take a look at these buttons.
The tick explicitly means 'yes', and the cross 'no' which is good because that's crystal clear. But then green and red mean exactly the same thing thus rendering the tick and cross entirely unnecessary. Right?
So here's the question; are the tick and cross a good idea or a bad idea?
Posted at 11:47 in Examples of Bad Communication, Graphic Design Reviews , Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (22) | TrackBack (0)
The finished interview with the designers of this year's D&AD Annual can be found over here on the D&AD blog. It's not as technical and geeky as I'd hoped, but it's well worth a read.
Posted at 20:37 in Graphic Design Industry Stuff, Graphic Design Reviews , Just Me Doing Stuff, Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
"I'm from the arts institute at bournemouth and am researching inspriation for my final major project. I was hoping you could ask your graphic designers 1 thing that inspires them.
Posted at 16:52 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (21) | TrackBack (0)
Dearest Tom,
Saying "What's wrong with Arial aesthetically?" is a bit like comparing Greta Garbo to Jodie Marsh.
Helvetica can be expensive and if you don't have it installed on your PC then, for you, Arial will probably suffice. But just look at the way the glyph's finish on these a's.
Oooh, isn't that lovely? They didn't make a film about Arial did they?
Although desktop printers don't use the same sort of screen as a Heidelberg they don't print solid colour. Only a screen print can do that. Deskdrop printers still measure in a dpi system but it's a little different. Macus will elaborate.
And lastly, seeing as you've opened Pandora's box, all those in favour of Helvetica say "aye" below.
UPDATE: Bruno provides some historical clarity here. A must read.
Posted at 14:40 in Listeners Questions, Typography | Permalink | Comments (71) | TrackBack (0)
Alison emails a question:
"i wondered if you have a few moments if you could give me some help on a project im working on. Im looking for inspiration really, i am currently in the process of designing a magazine, and i am about to start the contents page, so i am looking for artists that have designed contents pages in a typographic way, i just want to see ways in which typography can influence a contents page. so if you have come accross any good pieces of work, can you please send me some links"
Can anyone help?
Posted at 08:15 in Listeners Questions, Typography | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
So that was fun, wasn't it? A big thanks to everyone who took part. I hope it was interesting and I hope I answered your questions sufficiently.
I enjoyed that.
Posted at 17:45 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 17:43 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I like the new BBC stuff. I certainly don't think like this.
But then I like almost everything Lambie Nairn has done. Now he is a branding genius but he only really gets talked about in TV circles.
He created the classic Channel 4 logo.
And he started these charming little fellas.
Hard to appreciate now how innovative they both were at the time.
Recently he's done this
which is a pretty good bench mark for modern, consumer branding.
Posted at 17:41 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Design is art people buy. Well, that's my favourite explanation at the moment.
Posted at 17:34 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
One.
Posted at 17:33 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
My favourite thing I've designed, that's a tough one.
But one I get asked all the time. The problem is that for the last 5 years I don't feel as if I've really designed anything on my own. Not 100% on my own. My proudest achievemnent of the last five years (work wise) is this and everything we've all built and achieved with that. But, obviously, there are a lot of other people involved in that, not just me.
Work wise, I've always liked the stuff we've done for these guys, I think it's different and strong and I think that we (meaning us and the client) have created a really strong brand with going through some laboured branding exercise. They also had the courage to go with something that is very bold for their industry.
Then there's this which gave everyone all sorts of fun and led to me being interviewed all over the world including on Radio 4's Today programme. I have to admit I enjoyed that.
If you could get your hands on one account, anywhere in the world, who would it be and what would you plan for them?
There isn't such an account really. The best problem is the next one that needs solving.
I also want to second Andrew's question. I don't know about England, but Design is not taught in American schools. What 'curriculum' would you come up with to teach design to teenagers?
A curriculum! Jesus, Valerie! OK buy all the books by these guys especially this one. Read cover to cover, then get back to me.
Posted at 16:17 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Good question, If you haven't been, the Tate Modern is brilliant, and nearby. In fact it's always brilliant - so go there. Again if you want to stay nearby the Fashion and Textiles Museum can be interesting. Sometimes.
It sounds silly but we often visit Selfridges for inspiration, they often have interesting stuff there.
Sir John Soane's museum is the best in London and very, very over looked.
If it's a Friday you ought to go here. And if you bribe us with some of this lovely stuff you could pop in and visit our brand new studio.
Posted at 16:08 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Another one I'm not sure I'm fully qualified to answer that as most of my experience is in design agencies who don't tend to have planners. But anyway, I think it's best if anyone shares their toys with everyone else, if everyone is open and that they share ideas early - whilst at the same time remembering that certain people do certain things that you can't do. Just like you do things they can't do
Posted at 16:00 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Designers are very easy to employ. By that I mean it's easy to spot good ones. They can be hard to find but being one it makes it a hell of a lot easier to spot a good one. Plus that's our main competence so we're good at all that stuff.
Employing other people, admin staff etc, that's another issue...
What's the hardest thing? I'm not sure really, probably finding good ones but we don't have a major problem with that, we get hundreds and hundreds of CVs.
Posted at 15:59 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
How do you sell design? Should good Design Sell itself? For Instance,
Logo's - most new business who approach us for an identity shun at the
thought of paying more than £50 for a logo/brand. How do you tell them
that its better to start off with the "right image" rather than go to a
printers around the corner who knocks up a logo and 500 business cards
for £100!
You can ask a question in the comments section here.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Mike - do you really charge £50 for a logo? If so I think that's the mistake. You're placing so little value on that piece of work you're bound to get involved in a price war you can't win. Did you ever see those Gordon Ramsey programmes where he turns the restaurant around? He wants to double prices and the owners worry that no-one will pay those prices? And in the end they get less customers but more profit.
So, I think we're asking the wrong question here. But still. I don't think you should 'sell' design, sure there will always be an element of selling or persuasion in any consultant / client relationship, but I don't think a client should be 'sold' a concept.
If you're working collaboratively it should be obvious to both parties which direction you're traveling in and then the work won't need selling.
If you're asking how can you persuade people that it's worth paying decent money for a decent logo, I suggest you read this post. But to be honest if the clients you've got are willing to pay £50 then there's probably no hope.
Or was the £50 thing just a metaphor?
Posted at 00:00 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
You can ask a question in the comments section here.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I'm not 100% sure I understand this question, sorry.
Designers can't work in garrets anymore as discussed here. And then here we've discussed how creativity isn't linear. So I suppose I'm saying that the conversation is more important, but there is still that moment when it's just you alone with a blank piece of paper. I'm not sure I get the 'influence of others' bit.
Sorry. That doesn't sound very helpful.
Posted at 23:44 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
The questions are getting a little harder.
I thought this one would be really easy, every day I see stuff that makes me go "urgghh". But I suppose most graphic design is so ephemeral it's hard to recall bad examples. There are loads of examples of bad usability, like this
but that's technically usability and not design. Anyway, let's see if we can find 5.
1. That Abbey logo.
God I hated this. I don't normally reel at these rebrands like the tabloid press do but this is awful. Terrible.
You can begin to understand what they were trying to do with all that 'turning banking on it's head' stuff, but it just didn't work.
As I get older I'm starting to realise that you see more bad executions than you do bad ideas. What annoyed me most about this logo was the execution. The sheer amateur nature of those faded edges. Did they seriously think that would work as a shop front?
A modern logotype has to work on screen, on paper and in 3D. Faded edges to not align themselves well with these items. You might get away with it for a start up record shop, but a top ten high street bank? Madness.
It annoys me even more that Wolff Olins are responsible for this. What every you think about them, they've done some great work and they should at the very least have known better than this.
Look at the store fronts. Every sign is different. And not different in a good way. Some glass, some vinyl, some wood. Bad, bad, bad.
I remember visiting branches of the Abbey that had three previous logos on display. Once again if I was paying Wolff Olins style fees I'd expect them to get the rollout done properly. Rubbish.
2. Comic Sans
It's a cliché but I really hate Comic Sans. If you absolutely have to use a comic style font, you know, if you work for DC Comics or the Beano or something, then hand write it and do it for real. Certainly don't use it in restaurants, in hospitals, when lifts have broken, when couriers have to use the other door and never, ever on business cards.
3. Currys.digital
This is such a bad idea. Dot digital sounds so dated. The name is ridiculous. But the design. Take a look at this.
Grey and green? Just because the name is dated doesn't mean the graphics have to be. Unbelievable.
4. All design agency websites.
Drop the Flash intros. In fact drop the bloody Flash all together. Lose the picture of the studio dog. Lose the stock shots and do your own fucking photography. Forget all the 'why we're different' ' our philosophy' bollocks. Show me the work and give me a map. Quickly.
Sorry that's only 4.
Posted at 20:43 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
EXPLAIN WHAT 'BRANDING' MEANS
And if you work for a design 'agency' it's a near-on certainty that it'll be bullshit peppered with words such as 'holistic' and 'paradigm'. Or something like this maybe:
"It all starts with the creation of a mark and a brand system which includes a mission, vision and customer promise. Once BigBoy has created these using our proven research-based methodologies you can move forward with identity creation, message architecture and creative implementation across the marketing mix."
Impressive, eh?
But my favourite definition is from Jeff Bezos of Amazon: "it's what people say about you when you're not in the room".
Anyone got anything better?
You can ask a question in the comments section here.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
First off you won't find any "bullshit peppered with words such as 'holistic' and 'paradigm' " around here and you certainly won't find any where I work.
It's probably a good idea to look at the little tag cloud on the left hand side. You find that the biggest word is design, followed by good, interesting and stuff. That probably tells you more about the words I use than anything else.
So, what does branding mean?
I like David Ogilvy's suggestion, "A brand is all the ways a company is perceived and experienced".
If you're feeling a little more academic then Socrates' quote is useful, "Regard your good name as the richest jewel you can possibly be possessed of - for credit is like fire; when once you have kindled it you may easily preserve it, but if you once extinguish it, you will find it an arduous task to rekindle it again. The way to gain a good reputation is to endeavor to be what you desire to appear."
But I also like Johnny Cash's quote, this is an honest way for consultants to approach a clients brand, "I think I understand a little bit about how you feel about some things, it’s none of my business how you feel about some other things and I don’t give a damn how you feel about some other things."
Jeff Bezos' quote is good, very good, but it has one fundamental problem. It doesn't take into account that what people say when you are in the room is important.
(All pictures taken from Wikipedia with huge thanks, usual stuff applies.)
What's interesting is that as terms like 'logotype' and 'mark' are being lost, 'brand' and 'branding' are being used to mean everything from logo to identity to reputation to just graphics.
Posted at 19:00 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Is it a very methodical process, dominated by procedure, or does it happen at 3am on a Sunday morning?
You can ask a question in the comments section here.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Another good question. Short answer: It happens at 3am on a Sunday morning. Or 4am. Or 5am. Or on a Monday morning. Etc etc.
Longer answer: We kind of cover this in our standard "creds" presentation at work, Neil covers it if you download his presentation here and Michael, brilliantly, covers it here.
We get asked how we work every week and I think it's the hardest question we get asked. It's a hard question because there isn't really an answer. Creativity, as Michael pints out, does not happen like this.
There isn't really a determined path. There's sticking on walls. There's discussion. There's arguing.
There's more stuff on walls. And yes, often there's a moment of inspiration that comes from nowhere at 3am on a Sunday morning.
You can't really explain that part in a PowerPoint presentation. Maybe a better way of explaining it is this story (urban myth?) about Picasso.
"Pablo Picasso was sketching in the park when a bold woman approached him.
“It’s you — Picasso, the great artist! Oh, you must sketch my portrait! I insist.”
So Picasso agreed to sketch her. After studying her for a moment, he used a single pencil stroke to create her portrait. He handed the women his work of art.
“It’s perfect!” she gushed. “You managed to capture my essence with one stroke, in one moment. Thank you! How much do I owe you?”
“Five thousand dollars,” the artist replied.
“B-b-but, what?” the woman sputtered. “How could you want so much money for this picture? It only took you a second to draw it!”
To which Picasso responded, “Madame, it took me my entire life."
Posted at 18:23 in Listeners Questions | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -