100 Facts About Pandas

 

Think you know pandas? Well, think again. A new book from Square Peg publishers reveals a raft of unexpected facts about the lovable black-and white bears…

 

 

For example, did you know that if a panda gets struck by lightning, its black hair turns white and its white hair black? A spread from the book shown above reveals this affliction. These bears are known to pandologists as negative pandas.

 

 

Another fact revealed by the book is that at the height of the cold war, American Special Forces deployed six robot pandas equipped with advanced surveillance equipment into the forest of eastern China to spy on rural military bases (image of one of the robot pandas shown above). Apparently half of these robo-bears were shot by commercial poachers in the first week of deployment. The others were adopted by a cupboard of real pandas, and based on readings from tracking devices, were still roaming the forests until their batteries wore out in 1998.

 

 

Pandas have no fingerprints. This is believed to be why they are used as accomplices in many jewel and bank robberies. International law enforcement agencies arrest around 700 pandas every year.

 

 

Despite this bad reputation, until 1982 it was legal for infertile couples in Great Britain to formally adopt pandas. The spread above shows Mimi Laurence at home with her son Jeff.

 

 

The book also offers advice in the event of a panda attack. As the images above show, the following procedure should be followed: 1. Wrap the animal’s torso in a towel or blanket so its front legs are bound to its body. 2. Slap it hard across the face. 3. Deliver the animal to the authorities.

 

Clearly a vital addition to any library, 100 Facts About Pandas is written by David O’Doherty (who won the if.comedy award (formerly Perrier Award) at last year’s Edinburgh Festival), Claudia O’Doherty and Mike Ahern. More info on the book is here.

 

 

Henry Dreyfusss Lost (and Found) Symbol Sourcebook

symbol sourcebook.jpgWith Dan Brown‘s The Lost Symbol flying off bookstore shelves, we got to thinking about lesser known symbols, those that are usually recognized only within specific disciplines or have been lost to the ages. Famed industrial designer (and symbol junkie) Henry Dreyfuss and his staff once assembled a database of 20,000 symbols that served as raw material for the Symbol Sourcebook. Originally published in 1972 and now available from Wiley, the book still lives up to its subtitle—”An Authoritative Guide to International Graphic Symbols”—and comes complete with a wacky foreword by Buckminster Fuller. By focusing on “functional, instructive graphic symbols” and omitting alphabets, numbers, emblems, and logos, Dreyfuss created a visual reference that remains valuable and inspirational to designers—or anyone who might be curious about the universal symbol for everything from apricots to zeppelins.

HD symbols.jpg

We asked design historian Russell Flinchum, author of the authoritative biography of Dreyfuss, to shed some light on the Symbol Sourcebook. “The origins began with a desire to label John Deere and National Supply Co. (oil drilling equipment) with standard international labels that wouldn’t have to be changed from country to country, thus saving much time and effort,” he explained. The symbol gathering was primarily a joint project of Dreyfuss and hiw wife, Doris, who worked closely with Paul Clifton, the main designer on the project. “It began with a mass mailing of every organization involved with symbols they could think of, then collating this information and boiling it down to standard appearances.” Dreyfuss used the same approach in preparing The Measure of Man, the pioneering ergonomic reference manual published in 1960.

continued…

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Competition: five copies of Critical Cities to be won

Dezeen and not-for-profit organisation This is Not a Gateway (TINAG) have got together to give away five copies of Critical Cities – Ideas, Knowledge and Agitation from Emerging Urbanists. (more…)

The Lego Book!

 

After the enthusiastic response that our Lego calendar blog post recently received, it is with great excitement that we bring you…The Lego Book.

 

Book cover

 

Published by Dorling Kindersley, The Lego Book explores the story of how the brand developed from a small family-run business into one of the most popular children’s (and adult’s) toys. It includes fascinating imagery such as a pictorial history of the company’s logos over the years, a selection of which are shown below (1964 logo shown top).

 

Lego logo, 1946

 

1950

 

1958

 

1972-3

 

Historical spread from the book

 

And if that weren’t enough, it also comes with an additional guide, titled Standing Small, which gives a history of 30 years of the Lego mini-figure, including such memorable figures as…

 

…the Lego Town chefs (1998 female chef and 2003 male chef shown)…

 

 

…the Lego Wild West Cavalry Colonel (1996), and Indian Chief (1997)…

 

…the Lego Castle ghost (1997) and hero knight (2005)…

 

 

…the Lego Star Wars Anakin Skywalker (2002), Darth Maul (2000), and Jar Jar Binks (1999)….

 

…and the Lego Indiana Jones (2008).

Essentially if you’re into Lego, this book will offer you all the information (and possibly more) that you will need. More info on the book is here.

Competition: five copies of A Week at the Airport by Alain de Botton to be won

We’ve joined up with author Alain de Botton to give away five signed copies of his new book, A Week at the Airport – A Heathrow Diary. (more…)

Competition: five copies of The Source to be won

Dezeen and specialist publisher eightbooks are offering five readers the chance to win a copy of The Source – Inspirational Ideas for the Home by Michael Freeman. (more…)

Competition: five copies of Unfolded to be won

We’ve got together with design journalist Petra Schmidt and materials expert Nicola Stattmann to give away five copies of their new book Unfolded – Paper in Design, Art, Architecture and Industry. (more…)

Penguin by Illustrators: Romek Marber

In the first of two extracts from Penguin by Illustrators, a new book collecting together the transcripts of talks given by esteemed Penguin creatives, we have the full text of the presentation made by Romek Marber (b. 1925), best known for his “Penguin grid” and the Crime series covers from the 1960s…

The following is the introductory text to and transcript of the presentation Marber gave at the Penguin Collectors’ Society event, Penguin by Illustrators in 2007, which has now been published in a new book of the same name. Further details on Penguin by Illustrators follow the extract.

Romek Marber contributed to the Penguin Collectors’ Society’s previous book [Penguin by Designers] as a designer and really needs no introduction to people familiar with the Penguin cover story. He is best known as the designer of the Crime grid in 1961 and later that grid was used for Fiction and Pelican. The Crime grid, as Romek explains, is really about giving illustrators the freedom to do their work.

Romek Marber

I was surprised to be asked to speak about my work in illustration. I am not sure whether my work qualifies this description. It has never occurred to me to ask myself ‘am I an illustrator?’ I communicate visually and I search for clarity. I use type, drawing, photography or whatever. The subject matter may influence the tools I use. A picture takes shape as I work. Sometimes, something accidental occurs that intensifies the work and I am thankful.

I wanted to study painting. I applied for an educational grant to a body called ‘The Committee for the Education of Poles in Great Britain’. At the interview I was informed that the only grants the Committee awards are for the study of applied arts. A casual remark by a well-disposed committee member modified my ambition. He suggested that I apply for a course in Commercial Art.

Education: St Martins and the Royal College of Art

I had no idea what Commercial Art was about, but as the course title included the word ‘Art’, I enthusiastically agreed. I enrolled at St Martin’s School of Art for the course. Most of the staff teaching on the course were painters, only partly involved in design. The studies were directed at drawing, mainly from life, creating graphic pictures, and tracing letters from type books to form words or sentences. Actual typography was incidental.

When I was at the Royal College of Art, the Graphic Design course offered two options, either design or illustration. There was no strict division between the two. We shared the same studio, had the same teachers and were set the same projects. The answer to any set project was determined by an individual’s concept and interpretation.

As a student I spent time drawing and I regarded it as an exercise in observation, a visual note book. Now I use it whenever I feel it will be right to interpret an idea. The same with photography. I was interested in it but I wasn’t taught photography and I don’t see myself to be a photographer. My technical know-how is limited. I had a camera and a small enlarger. I used a variety of films and photographic paper, and late at night I blacked out the kitchen to develop film and to print. I experimented and played with the material available. I learned to manipulate the medium to my own end and to originate pictures.

The Economist and New Society magazine

The Economist covers I view with nostalgia. They led the way to designing covers for Penguin and ultimately to the redesign of their Crime series covers. Peter Dunbar had been appointed art director of The Economist. Up to then The Economist cover had running text and no picture. The printing was in letterpress on newsprint in two colours, red and black.

The newsprint paper and the coarseness of the halftone printed by letterpress suited the boldness of my work. I don’t know whether the covers would have been as effective if the artwork was in full colour. Black with red is simple and dramatic. At that time, full colour was too costly and was seldom used.

There was a ritual associated with designing an Economist cover, and I can recommend it. It began with a phone call asking me to reserve the day to do next week’s cover. One rolled up at The Economist art department about eleven o’clock in the morning and waited for the editorial decision as to which article would be featured on the cover. It could be a prolonged wait; the decision could be made in late afternoon.

And so, one had a drink, then we ended up in the ‘French’ (a pub in Soho), had another drink or two, met friends, and had lunch. Eventually we got back to the office hoping that the headline for the article to be featured on the week’s cover was ready. I did a quick sketch of what I intended to do, and after approval I returned to my studio to do the cover. There was no time for a last-minute change of mind. The artwork had to be ready by nine o’clock the following morning. A messenger would be waiting to deliver the artwork to the printer. The convivial and lively atmosphere of the art department made it a stimulating day. Dennis Bailey who also did Economist covers will agree.

The covers are evocative of the social, political and economic high points and concerns of the Sixties. I would have thought that by now those political issues would have been resolved. Sadly they keep recurring with persistent regularity, if in a different guise. The ‘No black pawns’ cover is about the interference of foreign governments in Africa; ‘The winds of change’, Prime Minister Macmillan’s famous speech on freedom in South Africa [shown above]; ‘Programmes for Expansion’, the US and UK economies [also shown above]; ‘Calling Kremlin 1961′, a telephone hotline between the White House and the Kremlin. When called the first time to do an Economist cover, I was apprehensive. I hadn’t had the experience of presenting a visual idea, and to have the artwork ready for printing in so short a time. There was no time to have second thoughts. I got used to the speed and I liked it.

To design the New Society covers I was given more time than was the case at The Economist. This made the work less hectic. The art director of New Society at the time was Richard Hollis. The logotype ‘newsociety’ runs across the top of the cover, and though very bold, I found more accommodating to the image. To the present generation of designers it may seem odd that I accentuate the time I was given to complete the work. One must remember that there was no computer, and therefore no PhotoShop, no QuarkXpress, no digital cameras, no instant printers.

For the cover ‘US industry invades Britain’, I tried to put across the energy and impact of US industry. The cover for ‘Are the social services good enough?’ I was amused by the result of the survey. People were ambivalent: one half answered ‘Yes’ and was happy; the other answered ‘No’ and complained. A drawing I remembered from my childhood would provide an amusing pictorial answer to this question.

Penguin Books: Pelicans, Penguin Crime, Penguin Fiction

In 1960, to have one’s work published in a serious magazine which had a wide national and international circulation was possibly the best publicity a designer could get. Germano Facetti, newly appointed art director of Penguin Books, noticed the covers I did for The Economist and got in touch with me. Our Language and Language in the Modern World, both by Simeon Potter, were the first covers that I designed for Penguin Books.

The designs for the two covers were done by photographic means. For the cover of Our Language I was trying to convey that the language is English and is evolving. I used the Union Jack to indicate that Our Language means the English language, and using the enlarger I began printing the title out of focus and with the adjustment of the enlarger, step by step gradually getting it into focus. The last line doesn’t reach total sharpness to indicate that the language continues to evolve.

For the Language in the Modern World cover I aimed to convey the language in a post-technologically oriented world. I photographed a young man talking, then converted the photo into a coarse halftone which I photographed and enlarged greatly. Soon after I did these covers I was asked to submit a proposal for a cover design to be applied to the entire Penguin Crime series. In other words a Penguin Crime house style.

Penguin Crime grid

At the time Penguin cover design was in a muddle drifting from one design to another, diluting Penguin Books’ identity, reputation and goodwill. I came to the conclusion that the cover design must unite the titles in the Penguin Crime series. This would be achieved by a visual uniformity of all or some of the components that make up a cover. The grid divides the cover into areas of white and green, determines the typography and the placing of type and picture, and is particularly important when artwork is commissioned from divers illustrators/ designers whose styles differ.

To launch the new Crime series I was asked to do twenty titles. The month was June and the books had to be on display in October. The ‘grid’ and the rather dark visual images, suggestive of crime, had an immediate impact. The launch was successful and Penguin Books went ahead changing all the covers on the Crime list to the new design.

Much has been made of the grid; it has even been labelled ‘the Marber grid’. I believe that the pictures for the initial twenty covers, played an important part in forging the identity of the Crime series. The grid was important as the rational element of control. The consistency of the pictures contributed, as much as the grid, to the unity of the covers, and the dark shadowy photography gave the covers a feel of crime.

Using photography was time-consuming and not all that rewarding as I had to do one cover at a time. As all the titles on the Penguin Crime list were gradually reprinted in the new style, there was a continuous flow of work. I collected all kinds of crime paraphernalia and planned the work so that I could photograph and work on many images at one time.

The grid and the covers

This illustrates flexibility in the grid and how a picture can encroach on the white area of the cover without affecting the style. For The Case of the Caretaker’s Cat by Erle Stanley Gardner the black photos of cats and the hand with a dribble of black ink give the image an ominous rather creepy feeling. You wouldn’t say ‘what lovely two pussies’.

The Night of Wenceslas by Lionel Davidson is a story about a man being chased through the streets of Prague. By coincidence, as I was about to do this cover, I was in a room where the window facing the street had a pane of ribbed glass. People passing by looked as if they were sliced into moving segments. As I moved my head even those standing moved. I bought a piece of ribbed glass. I used the glass to create movement and add an intriguing element to the chase. For the cover of The Case of the Turning Tide by Erle Stanley Gardner I used the same ribbed pane of glass to resemble the reflection of a face in turning tide.

For some of the pictures I used myself as a model. It was convenient and I didn’t expect a fee. Friends were wary of appearing on a crime cover; not even a major photographic facial distortion would tempt them. I tried to distort the picture in order not to be recognised. For the cover of The Case of the Substitute Face I was particularly successful in disguising my identity; my wife thought it was an improvement to my looks. Doing the crime covers was exciting and it was fun. I tried to make each picture mysterious and intriguing. I didn’t always succeed.

Some aspects of a photographic image happen by accident. In the case of the Maltese Falcon cover I could quite easily have discarded this picture. To me this was a powerful and menacing image. I thought it right for this famous Dashiell Hammett thriller.

For Death of a Stray Cat the picture is of a figure cut from black paper and a charcoal rubbing taken from a wooden plank. When combined they give the feel of sea, shore and mystery.

Penguin then decided that books by authors who have many titles on the Penguin booklist should have individual pictorial identification. I had almost finished doing the covers for Dorothy L.Sayers novels when I had a phone call informing me about the new policy. I modified the artwork and added a small white figure, which appears in a different posture on each cover, and it worked [see Have His Carcase, above].

The appearance of Penguin Crime in the new covers led to many offers of work, mainly about violence and crime. One such example is the opening page to an article on the Mafia which I did for Queen magazine. It was advantageous to have a page in Queen and was good publicity, but it was again about crime and I was getting tired of crime.

Georges Simenon was normally published in Penguin Crime, but some of his novels were to be published in Fiction. The covers were to follow the grid I originally designed for Penguin Crime. The photography and collage pictures that I did for Crime covers had too forceful an association with the Crime series. Just changing the colour to ‘Fiction orange’ wasn’t a positive enough change to break this association. In place of photography and collage I switched to drawing. The action in all the six novels takes place in France. I used the white of the paper, the red of fiction covers, and the additional blue colour to suggest the French three-colour flag.

After a break of a number of years I was asked to design covers for six of Angus Wilson’s novels. Penguin had a new house style which had one rule. The ‘Penguin’ symbol had to be placed in the right top corner of the cover. Title, the author’s name could be in any typeface, and the illustration, as well as the title, could be positioned anywhere on the cover. As the covers were commissioned to disparate designers and illustrators the Penguin identity became bleared.

I will end with the image to the opening page of a précis in Town magazine of Bashevis Singer’s novel The Family Moscat. Having done the picture, I was uneasy. I thought the picture might be too grim to be published. Dennis Bailey, the art director of Town, on opening the envelope had an unexpected surprise. We all question what we do. At some stage I step back from the picture and, an hour or a day later, I look at the design again and, for better or worse, I decide.

This is an extract from Penguin by Illustrators, edited by Steve Hare and published by the Penguin Collectors’ Society. The book is currently available to purchase from the PBS website, (£20 plus p&p). As a compendium of the Penguin by Illustrators event in 2007, the book features the five presentations by Dennis Bailey, Romek Marber, Jan Pieńkowski, Tony Lyons and Jon Gray, and is supplemented by an introduction by Phil Baines and two further chapters by Quentin Blake and David Gentleman.

The book covers virtually the entire period from Penguin’s tentative, and then formal abandonment of purely typographic covers in the mid 1950s, right up until the present time. It is designed by Ipek Altunmaral, a final-year student at Central Saint Martins, and has a cover designed by David Pearson.

CR Blog will feature David Gentleman’s chapter next week.

 

 

Former UnBeige Editors Make Good, Release Books

0925artwalk.jpg

We feel like absolute louts for not having mentioned this earlier, but yesterday at the office, we saw a copy of Chronicle‘s new City Walks Architecture: New York sitting out, likely having just arrived, when we thought, “Hey, isn’t that the project Alissa was working on?” Lo and behold, it was the work of dearly departed UnBeige editor Alissa Walker. It’s been out for over a month now and we really should have told you about it sooner, as it’s a thing of beauty. From the skyscraper shaped box to the design of the individual booklets giving you tours through all of New York, along with Alissa’s great, fun writing and stellar photographs, it’s a thing you much purchase immediately, even if you live somewhere that maybe isn’t directly in the city proper, like Oklahoma or New Zealand. But if you can’t immediately leave work to go find a copy, we recommend you hit up Alissa’s site for this look at the whole amazing package. And so we don’t repeat this process of two-months too late and upset any other former editors, we’re telling you several days in advance that UnBeige 2.0 editor, the wonderful Eva Hagberg, will be releasing her book Dark Nostalgia next week. It takes a look at the practice of blending historic detail into modern interiors and it looks splendid. But we promise to give her book the full report once it’s out and we have it in our sweaty little hands. And before you ask, no, we current editors don’t have a book coming out just yet. For some reason publishers still haven’t understood the brilliance of Lamar Alexander Versus the Frog People. One day.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The London Book Trade

Ed Maggs is the head of the renowned Maggs Brothers. The company was founded in the 1850s by Uriah Maggs and has occupied several premises including its current, allegedly haunted, address in Berkley Square

Photographer Mike Tsang’s exhibition, The London Book Trade, is currently showing at The Biblion Gallery, Mayfair and documents the esoteric world of dealers of rare and antique books…

Angus O’Neill has been an elected member of the council of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association since 2005. He has been dealing in rare books for over 30 years, starting out while still at school

“Rare book dealers make fascinating portrait subjects as they are strong individualists, united only by a love of books and a determination to preserve their quite unique way of life,” says Tsang, whose aim was to capture this rarefied literary tradition, currently battling against a range of external forces.

“The internet age has certainly created challenges for the trade,” he says, “as knowledge of the rarity and value of these books has become more disseminated amongst the public, instead of being confined to learned professionals. Also the rise in high street rents, the fall in literary budgets, the competition from charity bookshops – all these causes combined have led to the reduction in the number of independent book dealers in London by almost a third in the last decade alone.”

Stephen Foster comes from a family of book dealers and is a long-standing and respected member of the trade with premises in both Bell Street, Marylebone and Chiswick. He is an active member of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association

“The London book trade is, by definition, quite close-knit and I gained access to a lot of the portrait subjects purely by word of mouth, from a previous subject who supported the project,” says Tsang. “As the project progressed, it became clear that the environments the book dealers inhabit were just as much the subject of my work as the dealers themselves, as they often had distinct characters of their own.”

A veteran of Gray’s Antiques Market, where he opened his first stall in 1979, Bernard Shapero now runs his rare book business out of a five floor house, incorporating a print gallery just down the road in Mayfair

“As such, I worked as much as I could with available light as I wanted to preserve the unique atmosphere of each location. Sometimes the locations were so dark
that I had to use strobe lighting, but when I had to I did so discretely and worked on sculpting the light only to raise the ambient without changing the overall feel of the place.”

Henry Sotheran’s has the distinguished honour of being the longest established antiquarian booksellers in the world. Since 1761 Sotheran’s have been supplying top quality antiquarian books to collectors around the world

Jonathan Potter has been the head of Jonathan Potter Limited since 1974. The company, which specialises in antique maps, has been at the top of its trade ever since and has a customer base of enthusiasts, buyers and many and varied institutions and libraries

Robert Frew has been selling antiquarian books since 1975 and has earned himself a position as a highly regarded figure in the trade. Frew served as president of the ABA from 2005 to 2007

Pom Harrington is the owner of Peter Harrington Books. The company was founded from a stall in Chelsea antiques market in 1969, moved to new premises on Fulham road in 1997 and now incorporates both The Chelsea Bindery and Old Church Galleries

Rick Gekoski is a writer, book dealer and broadcaster as well as being one of the heads of R.A. Gekoski. An American expat who came to Britain in 1966, he has published books on William Golding, football and, of course, book dealing. He was also one of the judges of the Man Booker prize in 2005

Hugh Betts of the Maggs Brothers booksellers in Berkley Square

Tsang is a London-based portrait and documentary photographer who splits his time between assignments for humanitarian organisations across Asia and Africa and personal projects examining individuals within their social groups. See more of his work at miketsangphotography.com.

The London Book Trade
The Biblion Gallery, Biblion Bookshop
1-7 Davies Mews
London W1K 5AB
10am-6pm Mon-Fri, until November 7
(Also open each Saturday, 10am-6pm from October 10)