Seven Questions for Fast Company Creative Director Florian Bachleda

The June issue of Fast Company, celebrating the “100 Most Creative People in Business,” is covered in Conan O’Brien—nine of him, in guises ranging from Madonna to Moses—and ends with Margaret Rhodes‘ delicious backpage infographic about pastries (in honor of National Donut Day, which is this Friday, June 3). At the creative helm of all this creativity is Florian Bachleda, who since his appointment last fall, has dedicated his considerable talents to ensuring that the design of Fast Company is just as visionary as its subject matter. Bachleda, whose previous positions include creative director of Latina and design director of Vibe, was kind enough to pause his Memorial Day festivities to answer our questions about his lead-off presentation at next week’s ABSTRACT conference, career highlights (other than those involving O’Brien and exotic costumes), his summer reading list, and more.

1. You’ll be presenting at the upcoming ABSTRACT Conference in Portland, Maine. Can you give us a sneak preview of your presentation?
I’ll be talking about the four or five guiding principles of the ongoing Fast Company redesign. For previous titles, I’ve always employed specific design frameworks based on an editorial idea, so I’ll be sharing how that approach works, and doesn’t work, for Fast Company.

2. What is your greatest graphic design or publication design pet peeve?
People who don’t create content passing judgement on those who do.

3. What is your best or most memorable design-related encounter?
Three things: 1) Working for many years under Bob Newman, and trying to practice daily the lessons he taught me; 2) My first SPD Board meeting in 2002, and sitting at the same table with people like Diana LaGuardia, Janet Froelich, and especially Fred Woodward, who is the reason I’m a designer; 3) Having the opportunity to get to know George Lois, which is an experience and a privilege all it’s own.

4. What do you consider your proudest design moment?
Seriously, it’s every single day that I get to make a living doing a job I love. My father worked as a steel smelter for one company all of his life, from the age of 16 (he told the company he was 18) to 62. He never understood what I did, but he saw that I loved it. It’s a luxury he never had.
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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

May resolution wrap up and an introduction to June’s resolution

It’s difficult for me to believe that today is the last day of May. While I’m certain my calendar isn’t lying to me, I’m still confused as to how the time passed so quickly. Where did you go, May?

My resolution for May was to cut back on my media intake. I only watched two shows in real time and unsubscribed from three magazines. The battery on my cell phone stopped holding a consistent charge, so I was forced to cut back on my phone and application usage regardless of if it was my intention. Also, I was pretty consistent about using a timer to keep me from wasting time on the computer. Overall, I think it was a resolution that was kept well and will be easily continued throughout the remainder of the year.

My goal for June is to get our garage in gear. Our new house has a double car garage and it is incredibly tempting to abandon stuff in there. I tried diligently to not let it become a place where “I don’t want to deal with it right now” items were set during the move, but, alas, some of those things slipped through the doors.

My first goal is to get rid of all the clutter. Anything we don’t need will find its appropriate home on Craigslist, be taken to charity, be recycled, or be thrown away. All the clutter will be gone by Friday, June 10.

My second goal is to organize the remaining items so I can find things immediately when I need them. The items also must be organized so two cars can fit in the garage, even though we only have one car. We have friends and family who come to visit and their cars should be able to join ours. This goal should be met by the end of the month of June.

My mantra: Garages are for cars, not clutter.

If you have a garage, can you fit your car inside of it? Would getting your garage in gear be a good resolution for you for the month of June? I know I’m eager to get rid of the clutter and have a garage that really fits my family’s needs.


Erin’s 2011 monthly resolutions: January, February, March, April, and May.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Carrying Things, Part 1: Rushfaster Rounds Up the Best Bags

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If you’re looking to buy a bag, or are designing a bag and need to see a wide cross-section of product for inspiration, check out Rushfaster. The Australia-based online retailer (located in Glen’s hometown of Sydney) is like that friend you have who’s a bag aficionado and has a closet full of only the best stuff.

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Rushfaster offers a heavily-curated selection of brands from around the world—Booq, Gravis, BuiltNY, InCase, Mandarina Duck, Superdry and more—and stocks every conceivable permutation of bag and carry-thing: Laptop bags, luggage, messenger bags, backpacks, wallets, iPhone and iPad cases, you name it.

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Sci-fi classics in 3D

We’ve chosen our winner and added some of our favourite reader suggestions to the bottom of this blogpost. Read on to find out if your suggestion made the cut.

Vintage has republished a series of five science fiction classics, including titles by HP Lovecraft and Jules Verne, and what’s more they’re in 3D, with specs included in each copy so you can see the illustrated covers in all their glory. (Read on to find out how you can win a complete set.)

To make the covers, creative director Suzanne Dean and the Random House design team worked with four different illustrators. Jim Tierney created illustrations for both Jules Verne covers (shown above), and Sara Ogilvie and Mick Brownfield contributed artwork for The Lost World and Planet of the Apes respectively (shown below).

Vladimir Zimakov created the cover for The Call of Cthulhu, the last book in the series.

If you’ve got a spare pair of 3D glasses nearby, you can see the effect for yourself on the pictures above.

Competition winner

Thanks to everyone for sending us your favourite images, we were reminded of a few science fiction classics we’d forgotten about. Honourable mention should go to the following submissions:

However there can be only one winner, and the set of books will be going to Chris Anderson, for his submission of John Wyndham’s The Outward Urge.

Please email emma.tucker@centaur.co.uk to collect your prize.

Teague is Seeking a Brand Associate Creative Director in Seattle, WA

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Brand Associate Creative Director
Teague

Seattle, WA

The Brand Associate Creative Director, in partnership with the Brand Strategist, will build Teague’s branded experience offering. The Associate Creative Director drives conception and execution of creative content related to branded experience projects across multiple brand touch points. The Brand ACD will direct creative teams to conceive, develop and deliver creative solutions for a variety of consumer touch points including corporate identities, advertisements, product labeling, packaging, interactive experiences, retail environments, signage, apparel and more. The Brand ACD will ultimately develop the expression and articulation of the brand strategy and positioning to communicate a clear, consistent message and experience for the brand.

The Brand ACD will deliver branded experience projects by collaborating with Teague’s other core disciplines including Research and Strategy, Industrial Design, and Interaction Design.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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Fabric Facade Studio Apartment by CC-Studio, Studio TX and Rob Veening

Fabric Facade Studio Apartment by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

Strips of perforated fabric are tacked onto the facades of this house near Amsterdam by Dutch architects CC-Studio and Studio TX.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studiotx and Rob Veening

The design for Fabric Facade Studio Apartment was developed in collaboration with client and artist Rob Veening.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studiotx and Rob Veening

Each strip is attached to the elevation along one edge only, allowing the fabric to flap in the wind.

Fabric Facade Studio Apartment by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

The pieces were cut from rolls of teflon, a coated fibreglass material normally used for conveyor belts in food factories.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studiotx and Rob Veening

A central atrium with a skylight above provides natural light for an artists studio and exhibition space on the ground floor of the building.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studiotx and Rob Veening

The two uppers storeys contain the residential spaces, including a living room with a 4.5m high ceiling.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

Photography is by John Lewis Marshall.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

More stories about projects in and around Amsterdam »

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

Here are some more details from the architects:


Fabric Façade: Studio Apartment Rob Veening

Description

The house is built on one of the 350 plots designated for construction by private builders (not very common in the Netherlands), an initiative of Alderman Adri Duivesteijn, in the Homerus quarter in Almere (near Amsterdam in the Netherlands). The “Herenhuis” plots, where extra high ceiling clearance (3.5 m) was required at the ground floor level, are suitable for both residential and work functions.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

The assignment was to achieve a spacious home with downstairs a studio artist / exhibition space and on the top floors housing. The principal, Rob Veening, had after having lived in Canada for many years, expressed the wish that the house should not be minimally seized and narrow (like many Dutch residences) but spacious, open and giving one a sense of freedom of movement. A dream assignment for space loving designers, with the added challenge of a very limited budget.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

To save costs and to make the construction of such a large volume financially viable, a number, some innovative, measures were taken.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

The house (hull) was made wind and watertight by the contractor Postma after which the client finished it himself: stairs, insulation, interior finishes, interior walls, doors, equipment and installation of the external cladding. Contractor Postma’s advantage is that in addition to their own timber structure workshop they also produce their own windows and door frames. This eliminates contractors traditional 10% surcharge cost over these items. It also gave a chance to make very large window frames and doors (2.7m high) which could be realized without any fuss.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

One of the most expensive items in a building budget is the facade which is usually the first item that is reduced in ambition. This always has serious consequence for the architectural image. From there came the radical proposal.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

The municipality of Almere has C2C in high esteem and even drafted its “Almere Principles”! This course offered a chance to see how much they really meant it and how much liberty they were willing to give private clients. From this, cc studio developed the idea to try to produce the facade from residual waste, using their contacts with the tent industry. The extremely durable, non-combustible, residual material comes from rolls of PTFE (Teflon) coated fiberglass fabric, used in the industrial manufacture of conveyors belts for the food industry. This special material was completely sponsored by Verseidag-Indutex from Krefeld, Germany. The 5 m long rolls (about 1200m2 gross) were cut by the principal and cc-studio into strips and placed as overlapping shingles and tacked on a backing of osb panels. The flexible material moves with wind, creating a lively image. In the sidewall up to a height of 7 meters no pattern is applied due to possible future building that must, by regulation, build up to a minimum height of 7 meters.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studiotx and Rob Veening

Through integrated design it was also possible to omit the traditional steel portal for stability. The entire stability comes from stapled Fermacell (fiberboard) plates in the front, rear and side facades.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

To ensure the internal spatial relationship vides and split-levels were used. The artist’s studio downstairs is, at the side of the garden façade, visually connected with the living room on the first floor trough a vide. The studio therefore has an extra window giving it more light deep into the studio.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

In the middle of the building volume a central vide with at the top a skylight was carved out, visually connecting all the upper floors. A continuous internal space is the result which has a very pleasant light quality and orientation. Additional advantage is that the study / TV room, top level street side, does not need windows nor received them to save costs. Due to the split-level in the front part of the living room the ceiling height reaches 4.5 m giving it a real mansion (“herenhuis”) quality. The dimensions of the wooden doors 3.5 m wide x 2.7 m height contributes also to this sense of space. But due to all those large measurements the scale of the building is quite difficult to read and can only be measured by comparing it with the traditional sizes of the neighboring house.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

Finally, the house has a lower energy requirement than demanded by law (A EPC required then was 0.8, achieved 0.6) and also features a number of other sustainability features which made it eligible for “Green” financing (a lower interest rate for sustainable building).

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

It was a special, very nice and close collaboration between client and designers that made the best use of the, sometimes somewhat unconventional, opportunities.

Fabric Facade by cc-studio, studio TX and Rob Veening

design: cc-studio & studiotx in collaboration with R. Veening
structural engineer: cc-studio
building physics consultant: bureau Kent
contractor & frame manufacturer: bouwbedrijf Postma
facade material: Verseidag-Indutex
hull completion: september 2010
interior completion: juni 2011
plot size: 168 m²
plot price: € 48.000,-
gross floor area: 190m2 floor + 30m2 vides + 31m2 roof terras
gross volume: 1030m3
height: 13,5m
construction costs hull: € 170.000,- incl. VAT
finishing and installations: ± € 80.000,- incl. VAT
building system: timber frame structure on a concrete foundation and concrete hollow core slab ground floor


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Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

London designer Giles Miller installed this bar for Inside World Festival of Interiors at a former petrol station as part of Clerkenwell Design Week in London last week.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Called Step Inside, the installation by Chetwoods Architects featured furniture by local designers suspended from scaffolding overhead.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Miller covered the bar in 1500 yellow ceramic tiles, laid at 20 degrees to the curved MDF surface to create two opposing swirls.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

The bar was topped with grey quartz by Cosentino while the tiles were made in the UK and provided by Materials Lab.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Dezeen are media partners for the Inside World Festival of Interiors, which will take place 2-3 November 2011 in Barcelona.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Clerkenwell Design Week took place 24-26 May. See more stories about the event »

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Step Inside bar by Giles Miller

Here are some more details from Inside World Festival of Interiors:


STEP INSIDE BAR AT CLERKENWELL DESIGN WEEK

VISIT THE ‘EXPLODED ROOM’ AT THE STEP INSIDE BAR — BROUGHT TO YOU BY INSIDE WORLD FESTIVAL OF INTERIORS 2-3 NOVEMBER 2011, BARCELONA

Visit the Step Inside Bar’s ‘exploded room’ at the Clerkenwell Garage on Clerkenwell Road and you will find a topsy-turvy world where design anarchy flips convention on its head and chaos rules! In a unique instillation designed by Chetwoods Architects, furniture from some of Clerkenwell’s most exciting participants will ‘explode’ in an innovative way.

Celebrating the UK launch of Inside: World Festival of Interiors – Step Inside Bar operated by Clerkenwell establishment Giant Robot will be serving wonderfully festive Inside-themed drinks. Come and delight in the disorder as you have a drink at the bar designed by Giles Miller Studio, one of the UK’s most exciting up and coming design talents, with products from Materials Lab, the design worlds interactive materials resource and Cosentino.

Inside is a brand-new festival celebrating the world’s finest interior designers and their projects. Through a series of fringe events, talks, installations and the prestigious awards programme, Inside will be a vibrant platform for creative thought, mutual inspiration and idea exchange – capturing the design zeitgeist in style over two exciting days in Barcelona.


See also:

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Pop-up store
by Giles Miller
C-X75
by Jaguar
Dezeen Watch Store at
Clerkenwell Design Week

World Press Photo 2011

Voici la sélection annuelle du World Press Photo mondialement reconnue pour son concours annuel de photographie de presse. Parmi les différents lauréats des 10 catégories, c’est le cliché de Bieber Jodi qui a été retenu, immortalisant la jeune afghane Bibi Aisha.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Explorations in Typography: Mastering the Art of Fine Typesetting

As someone who works with typography and design every day, I have a few books I turn to when I need to clear my mind of clutter. One of my favorites is Robert Bringhurst’s “The Elements of Typographic Style”, which includes this rumination on the sanctity of the title page: “Think of the blank page as alpine meadow, or as the purity of undifferentiated being. The typographer enters this space and must change it. The reader will enter it later, to see what the typographer has done.” Lines like this refresh my understanding of the task at hand and clarify my sense of purpose.

Carolina de Bartolo’s new book “Explorations in Typography” has a similar effect, albeit via entirely different means.

“Explorations in Typography” is arranged as a series of twenty-four chapters — the “explorations”. Using a short excerpt from Erik Spiekermann’s classic text, “Stop Stealing Sheep and Find Out How Type Works”, as a mantra, the book guides the reader through a kind of typographical meditation.

In 24 explorations spanning 188 pages, the Spiekermann text is repeatedly typeset, using a variety of techniques to indicate paragraphs and hierarchy. Each exploration shows several examples of a different method of indicating paragraphs in text (and a few later chapters explore different alignments and hierarchies). A new pair of typefaces is used for each example. A colophon and additional side notes about the typesetting and the history of the typefaces are included with each setting.

The explorations are thorough, covering typesetting techniques from the most basic (using indents, for example) to the unusual (using varying directions of text to indicate paragraphs). Typeface choices also range from classic to cheerfully odd. Throughout, the typesetting and page design remain austere and exemplary. As the author explains, the book is meant to further typographical education through an “extended visual taxonomy”, and the broad palette of techniques and typefaces is true to that spirit.

The book is primarily a teaching device, which de Bartolo created “specifically for more advanced typographic study”. She is serious about the book’s potential as a textbook, including advice for both teachers and students on how best to use the book. The depth to which the explorations go is beyond the interest of the non-designer and probably most neophyte designers. This is a book for people who care deeply about text design and typesetting — and for those who are required to care about it, in the case of students. For those of us who fit at least one of those descriptions, “Explorations in Typography” is a valuable resource, and a reminder of the extensive possibilities of digital typesetting. It’s also pleasing, and motivating, to page through the book and study the evolving settings of the text.

The book itself is a lovely thing. At 9.25″ × 12″, it’s large enough to house a letter-size page of typography plus annotations in the margins. The volume is casebound with thin boards and a sewn binding, so it’s sturdy but lightweight. The page design is clean and spare, with a transparent modular grid that provides a flexible canvas for the multitude of typographical settings. The text of the authorial voice is designed to guide the reader through the myriad design samples within. It’s a squeaky-clean, high-contrast treatment that presents a cool yet quirky sophistication.

My one complaint about “Explorations in Typography” is in its free-wheeling use of typefaces. No less than 171 different typefaces are used in the book — at least two for every setting. The type pairings are often interesting, but too often they distract from the typography itself. This is, after all, a book about fine typesetting, not a font catalog. I appreciate that the author included an appendix with a page of advice about choosing typefaces and a complete list of fonts used. But I often wondered whether the book would be improved by simplifying the type. To go to the opposite extreme, what if the exercises were all set in the same serif text face, with one sans face chosen for the headlines? Or choose five or six pairings. In either case, the particular typefaces chosen would be less important than the restraint itself — a book such as this, which seeks to show a variety of typographical tools through demonstration, would be well served by a solid, unchanging typeface selection. The typesetting would then be seen clearly as typesetting, free of the distractions provided by a new pair of fonts on every page. Additionally, the fonts, nearly all of which are drawn from the FontShop catalog, are mostly of the modern, late-20th-Century variety, a choice that will give the book a dated appearance in short order. Exercising some restraint on typeface usage would not only serve the book’s purpose, it would serve its continuing relevance.

The book’s companion website is as well designed as the book, in form as well as function. The site provides information and examples from the book, and includes a terrific and easy to use interactive page that allows the casual user to try out some typographical explorations of her own.

“Explorations in Typography” is a well-conceived, well-designed book that fulfills its goal. It is a unique and valuable catalyst of typographical contemplation. In addition, it’s a solid teaching tool, and a worthy addition to the libraries of design studios, type enthusiasts, and design instructors.

Patrick Barber is a graphic designer, photographer, style maven, and community food activist living in Portland, Oregon.


CR Graduate Guide 2011

Free with the June issue of CR, this year’s Graduate Guide looks at how to promote your work, use blogging and Twitter to get commissions, and make the best of a studio placement. We also talk to the Lost in the Forest Institute who applied their “learning by doing” approach to designing the Guide itself…

The latest CR Graduate Guide (available now to subscribers and on UK news-stands) saw the Stockport College-based educational initiative, Lost in the Forest Institute, collaborate with CR and Barnbrook studio on its design.

For this edition we also have a great offer for UK-based students who can receive £2.90 off the price of CR June (which includes the Graduate Guide). To receive the discount, students should email Laura McQueen from their .ac.uk accounts. They will then be sent an exclusive voucher that can be redeemed at the news-stand for this month’s copy. An offer of a discounted subscription is also available.

Inside the Guide we have advice from SheSays co-founder, Ale Lariu, and some of her graduates from the Miami Ad School in New York on how you get your name out there, how to network and make the best of an interview:

Aberdeen-based illustrator and social media enthusiast Johanna Basford also answers questions on how she uses both her blog and Twitter to share projects and, ultimately, get some great client work:

The Lost in the Forest Institute tell us all about their unique learning environment for students (they’re a partnerhip between Stockport College and design studio Thoughtful) and the process of “learning by doing”, exemplified in their hands-on work on the design of the Guide this year:

Plus, we have Jonny Burch of ShellsuitZombie magazine talking to Jake Jennings – aka ‘Placement Man’ – on how he has managed to notch up nine placements at some prestigious studios since leaving university. He spilled the beans on how he gets them, what he gets out of them, and how best to use your time in a studio:

Finally, we have our list of Graduate Shows, which will appear on the blog as a separate post (feel free to add the details of your show to the list).

If you’re a student and would like to receive a voucher for £2.90 off the price of the June issue of CR (which includes the 2011 Graduate Guide), just email Laura McQueen from your .ac.uk account. Vouchers can be redeemed at the news-stand for this month’s copy.