A combination I've never seen before.
I've been trying to find a commercial design with these three combined, but the closest I've been able to come are the AnimalFlowers posters by Hanna Werning.
Posted at 02:00 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
I thought I'd come up with a great idea the other day. I had to wrap a friend's prezzie in a rush, so grabbed some song lyrics off the internet, type set it all nice, and printed it out. Hey presto – rapping paper.
I'd got my business plan halfway done, ordered the stationery and was all ready to go global, when I discovered someone out there had already thought of it. Oh well.
But I still like what I've done so I thought I'd share it with you.
If you like any of them, you can download the top one here, the second one here, and the last one here to use for your own rapping paper.
Points go to those that can name the Song, Artist, Typeface and Typeface Designer.
Posted at 02:00 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (20) | TrackBack (0)
Road markings are commonplace but it's rare you actually see them get painted. It is a sight to behold.
I used to do jujutsu (before I got a girlfriend), and once-upon-a-time I went to the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham for this jujutsu competition. It was pretty special because you got to watch the dans fight. They were super-elegant, and so full of power and control. This fella writing 'bus stop' on the road was no less graceful than those jujutsu masters.
No errors, no repeats, just complete confidence.
Posted at 02:15 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)
I had a few ideas on posts lined up as I approached my term here, but to throw the net out I asked my friends and family if there was anything they thought was worthy of your attention.
Now, we've all seen box office figures - week gross, ranking change on last week, number of weeks on release etc. It's normally presented in tables - nothing special. But my friend Emma told me about this, and it has totally blown the posts I had in mind out of the water.
It's easier to understand than the conventional way of presenting this type of information, you can track the success of films over time at a glance, you can see how oscar success impacts on ticket sales, plus it's beautiful. I'm scratching my head wondering why they don't use this method of presenting information more often.
Thanks Emma.
Posted at 00:05 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
Welcome to August, I'm Matt Dent.
If you're here for the insightful design commentary and the witty observations you'd be best to come back from September. But if it's mindless blogging that you're after, then welcome – you're going to enjoy this month.
I've got some big shoes to fill and I'm going to give it my very best efforts. Fortunately, Ben has told me that his readers are all very nice and I have nothing to worry about.
Posted at 01:00 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
It's been a long hard first half of the year and the team at NDG deserve a break, so as is traditional we'll be taking the whole of August off.
I don't want to leave you without any high quality design blogging, so following on from the runaway success of Henrietta and Mike, Matt has kindly agreed to Guest Write for the whole of August.
Matt Dent needs no introduction apart from that picture up there.
As with all guest writers he's been given a free reign as long as it has some tenuous link to design.
To be clear: it won't be me writing on this blog in August it will be Matt Dent.
Be nice to him. I'll sit back and wait for the "Oooooh, and he's cute!" comments.
Posted at 06:00 in Guests | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
It's just over 2 years since the London 2012 Olympic logo was launched to such derision.
Being a prominent design blogger I wrote about it back then. I've just reread that post and I agree with everything I said. Which is reassuring.
Actually I think I agree even more. I like the logo even more.
The chief argument from the loverz at the time was that it would grow on you as it was used in different applications. That it was so ahead of it's time, everyone would catch up by 2012.
Has it grown on you? Honestly?
We haven't really seen it used in a big way yet, there are still 3 years to go before the Olympics, but we have seen graphic design work creeping out of LOGOC HQ so now seems like a good time to stop and take a look and see how we all feel about.
The best piece of work by miles is this fantastic map by Stamen.
Without question the best piece of graphic design and the best use of the branding to have emerged so far. Vibrant and exciting but still easy to navigate. Lovely.
To take one small detail, look how they've used those shapes in the water of the map above. That's a sensible design decision, but it's also exciting and different. I hope this is how the branding was intended to be used when it was conceived.
This is some digitally eventy work from Matt and the guys at Universal Everything. Nice isn't it? EXCITING.
Some of you are getting a bit scared now because we haven't seen an Helvetica yet. Look again, there was some on that Stamen map.
This is the main LOGOC website. A pretty standard corporate affair in terms of content. Looks good though.
The colours are nice. They are lively. All that stuff above seems to have a fast moving pace about it which is good and appropriate. It doesn't look like clarity has been scarificed for style.
Managing this brand must be very difficult. Bureacracy and vested interests at every turn, so it's even more impressive that they manage to eeak exciting graphics out.
Not everything is rosy though. Take a look at this hideous beast.
That's breath takingly bad. Just stick the logo over there by the swimmers head it'll be alright. Incredibly insensitive and ill thought out. Terrible.
But to me the success of this logo will be how it's used by non roster approved LOGOC people. If it's a great logo even the fake shirt sellers will make it look good.
Or the press. That up there looks good to me. Obviously it's not gonna win any design awards, but it looks exciting. The colours are good - and those colours have been forced on the Telegraph by the attitude of the brand. That's a good thing.
I like it. I like it more. What do you think?
Posted at 23:36 in Graphic Design Reviews | Permalink | Comments (37) | TrackBack (0)
A few weeks ago I met with Tiffany from D&AD and we discussed a few things (exciting forthcoming things that you will like!) and she also asked me to put my name forward for the Executive Committee.
I thought about it for a while and spoke to some people who are on the Committee and who have been on it previously. And I decided to stand. Tony Davidson and Matt Dent were kind enough to nominate me.
The Exec Committee is a slightly strange thing, but it would appear that they are after some 'younger' representation and some people who aren't in Tokyo/New York/São Paulo when the meetings take place 6 times a year.
In Design there are 9 other people on the list (which is quite a lot) and we've all had to write a manifesto and include a CV. To save you some time my manifesto is below and my CV is here.
The D&AD isn't perfect (nor is my manifesto) but it's our organisation and we'd be a poorer industry without it.
The election is only open to Members, so if you'd be so kind to pop over here and read all the manifestos and if you decide to vote for me that would be grand. Thank you very much.
I suppose this is a virtual hustings so if you'd like to ask me a question, then you can do in the comments below.
Vote early, vote often.
Posted at 02:36 in Graphic Design Industry Stuff | Permalink | Comments (10) | TrackBack (0)
We understand that the road is closed, that's pretty obvious from the massive steel barrier shielding the huge orange digger. But still the red and white sign is a necessary notification.
It's helpful to know which way to travel as we can no longer continue straight on. The yellow sign that says 'Diverted traffic' and points to the right does that job perfectly well.
The contractor has the right to advertise his firm.
The other four signs (six if you count the cones) are unnecessary, ugly, make the street considerably more unpleasant and are insulting to my intelligence.
Posted at 11:12 in Examples of Bad Communication | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
A few weeks ago you may have noticed this gorgeous thing whistling around my Flickr pages.
It's a newspaper we designed and printed for the BBC called 8.
It's a collection of essays which came out of 8 studies commissioned as part of the AHRC/BBC Knowledge Exchange Programme. The paper contains articles by Bill Thompson, Katherine Corrick and Pat Kane among others. Brendan from the BBC talks more about the project here.
I'm particularly fond of the cover. Looked great on the press.
Back in January when made TOFHWOTI we said it was a product of the future. The success of that project made us investigate that a bit more. We spoke to 4iP, Channel 4's investment fund, who agreed to fund a separate business called Newspaper Club.
Newspaper Club will have two components. It's main purpose is to allow anyone to curate, create and then collect (by that I mean print, but that doesn't alliterate) newspapers. It might be a group of birdwatchers, the residents of an estate campaigning for improvements, or a yearly “best of” printed product for obsessive bloggers. You'll be able to organise this stuff online and then print as little as a few to as many as a few thousand.
Like TOFHWOTI but made by you.
Those newspapers will be based on template designs and the user will have limited design choices. Obviously. Which is why I've been thinking about this stuff.
But we realise that some people may want a bespoke option to create something extra special, like 8 for the BBC. A document created from scratch. We're currently working on another one for Penguin which I'll tell you about soon.
Newspaper Club is a major project, lots of people already seem excited by it and there is a lot more I want to tell you. Stuff about how we're working as a team, how we're building the Newspaper Club brand, 4iP, designing templates and so on. But I shall save that for another day.
We launch in September, but in the meantime you can follow our adventures on the blog over here. According to Tech Crunch it's 'hilariously frank'. You can sign up for a beta invite here, you can read our insightful Twitter updates and if you'd like a bespoke newspaper for your corporation you should give me a call or drop me a line - [email protected].
More to follow.
Posted at 08:00 in New Thinking and Ideas, Newspaper Club, RIG | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)
Increasingly I find straplines irrelevant. The world of [visual pun + punchline = ta da!] seems a million miles away from where branding is heading at the moment.
However, there's a small sub category of branding where a pun or a strapline always makes me smile. Like this.
That's good isn't? Funny and relevant. Even without being funny it's true. It won't win a Black Pencil and it won't win any Lions, but it made me smile.
More importantly it made me ring my Dad and tell him. My Dad doesn't work in anything to do with advertising or marketing or anything like that. And he never has. But it made him smile, laugh even. In fact if he saw a line like this he would probably ring me, and I would laugh.
And then there's this.

Photo from Acme, usual rules apply.
Which is for a cement / paving sort of company. It's good isn't it? Makes you smile. My Dad loved this one even more.
Turns out this is a very common strapline for cement / paving companies, but it's still good.
There are two points here. Number 1, straplines / overtly punny communictions still have a role to play. Maybe not for the launch of the next Ubi Webby Cola, but for the everyday 'backbone of Britain' firms. In fact, for people who still call themselves firms.
Number 2, if you can create stuff that makes your parents pick up the phone, that's a good thing. I've always thought this. Alan Fletcher understood this and John Webster understood this. And as the world gets older and older, maybe the consumer is no longer your wife - the consumer is your parents.
Posted at 06:57 in Graphic Design Industry Stuff | Permalink | Comments (17) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 21:44 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
You all know Patton's speech, right? If you don't it's over here. Watch, it's awesome. (If that link doesn't work, Google 'patton opening speech'.)
Anyway. It's now on YouTube as glorious typography.
That, for now, is all.
Posted at 11:31 in Seen and heard | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Posted at 18:33 in Seen and heard | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Tom has a written a great little summary of examples of text in the world. Take a look, lots of good stuff like this.
Posted at 10:23 in Typography | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Lauren sent me this lovely thing in the post which I'm only just getting round to sticking up here.
WARNING: These photos aren't as nice as the ones AceJet takes.
It's from an exhibition Tobias Frere-Jones held in Melbourne of his collection of photos of NYC signage. It's fucking gorgeous.
Since 2002 he's been documenting the lettering of NYC. Here's a pixelly explanation here.
Lovely stuff. Thanks Lauren.
Posted at 10:25 in Seen and heard, The Design Disease, Typography | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Wieden + Kennedy London have set up a thing called Platform. As the name suggests it's a way for talented people to find their way into advertising and other creative industries. Not just w+k and not just writers and art directors.
Here's the official blurb:
If you are reading this and you're a design student who's just graduated and you're worrying about finding a job (and you should be worried about that) then you could do a lot worse than apply for this. There's a simple brief to answer and they'll pay you £250 a week for 6-9 months.
You should apply. The deadline is tomorrow so you'll need to be quick. But you should still do it. Stop watching the cricket. Apply.
Posted at 14:23 in How To Get A Job In Graphic Design (Kind Of) | Permalink | Comments (14) | TrackBack (0)
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