When I wrote about Good Night Lamp last year it got a lot of postive reaction on Twitter.
You can now back it on Kickstarter.
Good Night Lamp on Kickstarter from Good Night Lamp on Vimeo.
Posted at 10:43 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
There's a fab new message style available on BERG Cloud for Little Printer. Sadly it's not called Wham! it's called Poster.
I don't have a Little Printer, but I do like sending my friends messages via BERG Cloud. Like this one.
Posted at 14:23 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Fantastic to see him honoured in the New Year Honours list. Richly deserved.
Wonderful designer, wonderful man, wonderful work. The Inter City 125 train, the latest version of the Black Cab, the Kodak instamatic camera, parking meters, Wilkinson Sword razors, Parker pens, Kenwood food mixers... and lots more. Proper work.
All that and he founded Pentagram.
The book of the recent Design Museum exhibition is worth buying. The Design Museum also has a decent biog.
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I re-read this the other day and got a bit emotional. It generated more feedback than any other post this year. I wrote it in June. I still like it. Here it is, reproduced in full.
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Some time ago Anthony Burrill very kindly gave me a print. This one.

Picture from Anthony's site.
It's a lovely thing and I remember thinking, oooh that will go nicely in the space at the top of the landing. I intended to get it framed and hang it up. The weeks passed by and I started to worry about the message.
The top of our landing is a place the kids walk past every morning, the sun shines through the window and fills this space with light. This print, with it's bold, clear message would be unmissable. I started to worry that "you know more than you think you do" wasn't the right message for children, ages 0-7, to be faced with every morning.
Sure, I know what it's getting at. I understand the point it's making, but I'm not sure it's helpful advice to a three year old. A jaded 30 something adult - yes. A sponge like brain just starting school - not so much.
IT IS POSSIBLE I'M OVER THINKING THIS.
Yes, it is. I'm aware of that. But once a thought gets in your head, you can't let it go, can you? So I started thinking about what message I would like to greet my children every morning for the next 20 years or so. Tough brief.
I've been meaning to blog this next bit ever since I started blogging but have never got round to it. The Roald Dahl book, Danny Champion of the World has, I think, had a huge impact on my creative career. This passage has always stuck with me.
"Ours was just a small village school, a squat ugly red-brick building with no upstairs rooms at all. Above the front door was a big grey block of stone cemented into the brickwork, and on the stone it said, THIS SCHOOL WAS ERECTED IN 1902 TO COMMEMORATE THE CORONATION OF HISROYAL HIGHNESS KING EDWARD VII. I must have read that thing a thousand times. Every time I went in the door it hit me in the eye. I suppose that’s what it was there for. But it’s pretty boring to read the same old words over and over again, and
I often thought how nice it would be if they put something different up there every day, something really interesting.
My father would have done it for them beautifully. He could have written it with a bit of chalk on the smooth grey stone and each morning itwould have been something new. He would have said things like,
DID YOU KNOW THAT THE LITTLE YELLOW CLOVER BUTTERFLY OFTEN CARRIES HIS WIFE AROUND ON HIS BACK?
Another time he might have said,
THE GUPPY HAS FUNNY HABITS. WHEN HE FALLS IN LOVE WITH ANOTHER GUPPY, HE BITES HER ON THE BOTTOM.
And another time,
DID YOU KNOW THAT THE DEATH’S-HEAD MOTH CAN SQUEAK?
And then again,
BIRDS HAVE ALMOST NOSENSE OF SMELL. BUT THEY HAVE GOOD EYESIGHT AND THEY LOVE RED COLOURS.THE FLOWERS THEY LIKE ARE RED AND YELLOW, BUT NEVER BLUE.
And perhaps another time he would get out his chalk and write,
SOME BEES HAVE TONGUES WHICH THEY CAN UNROLL UNTIL THEY ARE NEARLY TWICE AS LONG AS THE BEE ITSELF. THIS IS TO ALLOW THEM TO GATHER NECTAR FROM FLOWERS THAT HAVE VERY LONG NARROW OPENINGS.
Or he might have written,
I’LL BET YOU DIDN’T KNOW THAT IN SOME BIG ENGLISH COUNTRY HOUSES, THE BUTLER STILL HAS TO IRON THE MORNING NEWSPAPER BEFORE PUTTING IT ON HIS MASTER’S BREAKFAST-TABLE "
So that's the goal, right? "put something different up there every day, something really interesting."
But what that passage also does is demonstrate the significance of walking past a piece of seemingly meaningless text every day for years. You notice this stuff, it sinks in. So what would I want to sink in?
When we were kids we had a version of this poem on the kitchen wall. I say "a version" as I can't remember the words exactly and google has hundreds of different versions. But it went something like this.
If a child lives with criticism,
he learns to condemn.
If a child lives with hostility,
he learns to fight.
If a child lives with fear,
he learns to be apprehensive.
If a child lives with pity,
he learns to feel sorry for himself.
If a child lives with jealousy,
he learns to feel guilty.
If a child lives with encouragement,
he learns to be self-confident.
If a child lives with tolerance,
he learns to be patient.
If a child lives with praise,
he learns to be appreciative.
If a child lives with acceptance,
he learns to love.
If a child lives with approval,
he learns to like himself.
If a child lives with recognition,
he learns to have a goal.
If a child lives with fairness,
he learns what justice is.
If a child lives with honesty,
he learns what truth is.
If a child lives with sincerity,
he learns to have faith in himself and
those around him.
If a child lives with love,
he learns that the world is
a wonderful place to live in.
I've always liked the sentiment there. In my head I'd like to get that properly typeset and screen printed. It could be a beautiful thing in a nice frame somewhere. But it's too long, and the advertising creative director in me says you'd never read that from the top of the landing as you move down the stairs. It needs to be something simpler.
And so I thought about Jones's Get Excited and Make Things.
I've always loved this. I remember the day Matt did it. I remember the article that provoked it. (Full story here.)
I love it's positivity. I like the fact it's a rallying cry rather than a hectoring statement. I love the warm vagueness to it. It's smiple, powerful, a nice way to start the day. Matt is a friend and it feels like an artifact of my time. So that was it. I had found a winner. Up it went.
"I must have read that thing a thousand times. Every time I went in the door it hit me in the eye. I suppose that’s what it was there for."
I can only hope.
Posted at 10:10 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Lots of friends have started things this year. The Internet of Friends' Things. It's nice.
But the best moment by far was BERG's Little Printer being featured in Avengers Assemble #9.
That is pretty crazy awesome.
No-one really knows how it ended up there, and like BERG say in the disclaimer "we know Little Printer is never mentioned by name, you don’t actually see the little fella, and Tony Stark being the super-genius he is might have built his own receipt printer subscription information device… ".
But still. Awesome.
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Easy this. Really easy.
Beautiful. Stunning. A technical master piece. Ground breaking. Wonderful.
Which is the best one? Lots of people like Toner, but I'm a huge fan of Watercolour. Incredible work.
Posted at 14:27 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
When James Bond met the Queen. Captured on a Twitter timeline by Paul Annett. Read from the bottom up.
Posted at 14:46 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
An odd one this. W+K celebrated their 30th, Pentagram their 40th and D&AD their 50th. I was fortunate to go to all three parties. I say 'fortunate' genuinely, as the 21 year old me would have been insanely excited about going to any one of them.
They were all good, but I think the Pentagram one was the best. There was a good mix of people. I met some new people, I saw some old friends. The cocktails were good. A great deal of effort had gone into the catering. The venue was suitably adorned. Kenneth Grange gave a funny speech where he refered to 'absent friends looking down on us, and Alan looking up at us'.
A good night.
Posted at 14:25 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Initially a toss up between the Istanbul drone shadow and Dronestagram but I think this just pips it, becuase of the sheer simplicity of execution, the lightness of touch that goes with all good ideas and the huge reaction it got on Twitter and in the press the day after. It even made the Shard wikipedia page.
And cos it's well funny.
Picture from joroach.
Picture from Lapatia.
So. Not this.
Or this.
Got Turner Prize written all over that boy.
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Chosen by special guest Jones. Drawn by Guy Moorhouse.
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The bit in The Thick Of It where Malcom Tucker tries to remember the name of Ollie's favourite film.
"What's that film you love? The one about the hairdresser, the space hairdresser?"
Clever, incredibly well observed and best of all hilarious.
Posted at 14:01 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The Good Night Lamp. A brilliant idea.
"A family of lamps is made up of a Big Lamp and Little Lamps that are linked to it. Send the Little Lamps to anyone in the world so that when you turn your Big Lamp on, the Little Lamps turn on as well."
Alex (also brilliant) has been working on this for a while, but there was a significant change this year. The design went from this
to this
That's not just better because it's better looking. It's better because the design of the thing helps explain what the thing does. The design helps you understand the object in a way the other design doesn't.
And that, dear listeners, is exactly what design is supposed to do.
Lovely.
Posted at 14:19 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Right then, some classic blogging coming up. A little series on the best stuff of 2012 as chosen by me, for me, to be posted on my blog by me. Completely random selection of stuff I can remember from 2012.
First up - best ad, easily Channel 4's Meet the Superhumans.
I loved this. Watched it a million times, bought the song. Almost shed a tear.
It's a tough, tough brief handled superbly by the inhouse team 4Creative. It's incredibly powerful, different and cool. The editing and music choice are fantastic.

Unfortunatley cos of the music you can't embed it from YouTube but you can watch it here and you can read the Creative Review article which is much more better written than this post.
Posted at 10:46 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
These little fellas are springing up all over town and all over my instagram feed.
I saw my first yesterday.
They have names. I don't know why.
I thought there would be a huge community or fan base online. I thought that Sorrel would have his own page, amazon.co.uk/sorrel or something but I can't seem to find anything. It may just be on some super cool social network I know nothing about.
There isn't a Flickr group and there isn't a wikipedia page.
picture from Matt
In case you were wondering you can get stuff delivered to a locker and then collect it at your leisure. Add the locker to your Amazon address book and you're away.
"Once your order is delivered to the Amazon Locker, you'll receive an e-mail with instructions and a unique pick-up code. When you go to the Amazon Locker, enter your pick-up code and the locker with your parcel will open."
I've never used one, but I guess this is probably a good idea. Especially if you have one near your home or work.
Anyway.
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Saw this the other day. Thought it might come in useful one day. Taken in the secret underground car park at work.
I love the secret underground car park because it makes me feel like James Bond, every day.
Becuase James Bond definately drives into a secret underground car park when he arrives at his government HQ (just like me). In fact I think he might use our car park because he keeps his old Louts in there. He's painted it red since the days of The Spy Who Loved Me, but it's definitely his car.
Posted at 09:01 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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