New look for the RIBA Journal

Covers of the first two issues of the redesigned RIBA Journal

Matt Willey’s redesign of the RIBA Journal is a complete overhaul of the 120 year-old architecture title; from cover to typefaces via a new logo and format. The designer and editor Hugh Pearman talk us through the project…

Established in 1893 by the Royal Institute of British Architects, the RIBA Journal has the largest circulation of any architectural magazine in the UK and prints around 30,000 copies each month.

Cover tests looking at various colour combinations, and how the new design will work over a series (option to run portrait images shown, bottom right)

For its redesign the journal’s editorial team, led by RIBA Enterprises head of media Jonathan Stock, wanted to offer its designer a clean slate. “We did a complete rethink of the magazine’s content and structure,” says Pearman, “so that it worked from the inside out: content strategy first and only then the design”.

Willey appealed to the RIBA team because of his ideas and attention to detail, Pearman says, and the fact that he had seen through the launch of his own magazine, in the shape of Port.

“It was also in his favour that although an enthusiast for design and architecture, he had not previously designed an architecture title,” says Pearman. “We were clear that we did not wish the new RIBA Journal to resemble any other title in our sector.”

Extensive reader research revealed that print was still valued very highly by RIBA members and the “feel” of the journal was something that needed to be addressed. “Everything changed with this relaunch,” says Pearman, “including repro house, paper sourcing, and printer.”

Even the format has changed, slighty – the journal remains the same height but is a little wider, allowing for better use of the imagery across inside pages. The job also ran to redesigning the PIP supplement and to designing a letterhead, business cards and postcards, the latter in place of comp slips (below) .

“We improved the printing and changed the stock to a very good uncoated stock, the same as Port’s,” says Willey. “Making the format wider was to do with various things – not least to do with getting space and breathing-room in to the spreads, but it also makes the magazine fold open nicely, it lies flat.”

There is also a fairly radical approach to the design of the cover, which adopts a graphic approach instead of, what Pearman considers to be an industry-norm, the full bleed image of a building.

According to Willey, the RIBA Journal covers from the mid-1960s and early 1970s were “graphically more interesting and successful when restricted by the printing limitations.”

RIBA July 1970, on left, and July 1965 covers

For the contemporary redesign, he says he “wanted to set up a cover template that didn’t depend entirely on an ‘astonishing’ ‘cover-worthy’ architectural image, which is a difficult thing to achieve month in month out. Actually I think it’s part of the problem with many architecture magazine covers; an over-dependency on a stand-alone cover image.”

“I wanted this to work in a more graphic way,” he continues. “The images still need to be good, and better than before, but the success of the cover depends on other things as well now – the crop, the use of colour – and that’s a huge help.”

“The cover ‘is’ the logo for the magazine,” he adds. “The masthead, and a box and keyline that are the exact same dimensions as the magazine, so the business card for example is like a mini-magazine.”

Cleverly, the ‘two halves’ approach will enable the journal to also use full bleed imagery beneath the logo if a portrait image is used (retaining a colour tint), and allows a landscape format picture to be used – a staple of architectural photography, Pearman adds.

The journal also boasts a new bespoke font, RIBAJ Condensed, created in collaboration with Henrik Kubel of A2/SW/HK.

“It’s a condensed Grot typeface to compliment Henrik’s Grot 10 that I’m using in the magazine,” says Willey.

“Grot 10 is not dissimilar to a typeface that was being used in the RIBA Journal in the 1970s, and whilst it was interesting looking through the archive of journals, I wasn’t interested in this design ‘reflecting’ old issues too much – this needed to feel distinct and modern, but not ‘of the moment’. I wanted it to feel like it’s something that has been around a long time; authoritative and confident.”

RIBAJ Condensed is used for small text as well as a headline tyepface, while other typefaces used include FM for body text and standfirsts; and PIP has a different family of typefaces, Typewriter and Outsiders, each of which is designed by Kubel.

Cover and spread of the PIP supplement

“One of the joys of working with Henrik was being able to tweak things like the Grot 10 typeface,” says Willey. “The type is often locking-up tightly to a rule and so he did a version of Grot 10 for me where the ascenders and descenders are the same – so you get nice clean lines when the type sits close to a rule.”

The new issue also features a series of new icons for the ‘core curriculum areas’ in the Intelligence section of the magazine drawn by La Tigre (above), byline portraits by Holly Exley (editor Hugh Pearman, below) and photography by Carol Sachs, whose work has appeared in Port and YCN.

For the first two issues of the Journal, September and October 2013, Willey has worked alongside RIBA Journal art director, Patrick Myles.

“This was a hugely exciting project for me,” says Willey, “because it wasn’t simply dressing up what had already existed and choosing a few new typefaces, there was an opportunity to address everything – how it behaved editorially and how the content was structured, word counts and ‘breathing room’ on the pages.”

“This is less of a redesign,” adds Pearman, “more of a completely new magazine.”

The October issue of the RIBA Journal is out soon. More details at ribajournal.com and more of Willey’s work can be seen at mattwilley.co.uk.

A look Inside Chanel

Inside Chanel is an ambitious online project telling the story of the fashion house and its founder via a series of online documentaries

The website launched last autumn but the final set of five films are in the process of being released. Each combines striking black and white graphics with archive footage and photography to relate a different chapter in the story of Chanel, its brands and its founder.

Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel was fiercely independent. She wore trousers, cut her hair short, drove her own car, smoked in public, sunbathed in Biarritz, openly took lovers – all of which was totally at odds with the softly feminine ideal of the Frenchwoman at the turn of the century. Chanel’s designs freed women from constraints. She was the first to dress women in trousers, to make black chic and sexy for evening wear and to adapt men’s tailoring to a woman’s silhouette.

The story of the young Gabrielle Chanel is related in Chapter 6, Mademoiselle

 

While Chapter 7 covers her later years

 

Here’s the story of Chanel No 5

 

And of a certain actress’s relationship with it

 

And this film beautifully tells the story of Gabrielle Chanel’s transformation into ‘Coco’ and international fame

 

Incidentally, Chanel remain tight-lipped over who created the films but the above clip in particular looks very much like the work of illustrator Lorenzo Petrantoni to us.

 

See all the films here

 

Designing the future

Design Museum exhibition The Future is Here offers a fascinating look at modern technology’s impact on design and features some stunning graphics by studio Lucienne Roberts+. Here, Roberts explains her role in the project and how the graphics were created.

If you haven’t already visited The Future is Here, you should. On until October 29, the Design Museum exhibition considers the possibility of a new industrial revolution, exploring the rise of technologies such as 3D printing, crowd-funding and open-source software and their impact on design and manufacturing.

Studio Lucienne Roberts+ created the graphics for the show and designed and commissioned signage, infographics, laser cut illustrations and large-scale photographs to illustrate its content.

“It was an interesting project to work on as we had a semi-curatorial role,” says Roberts, who has designed graphics for shows at the Wellcome Collection, UCL and Kensington Palace. “When working on exhibitions, you always try to help the story along but this project took that to a whole new level. The show deals with some complicated themes and we wanted to help make it simple, accessible and fun,” she explains.

The studio’s LED title signage uses a strikethrough device and places the word ‘is’ over an unlit ‘was’ to highlight the speed at which modern technology is developing. “We liked the name because it has two meanings: the future is here at the design museum but it’s also here and now and changing all the time,” adds Roberts.

Roberts also commissioned photographer Angela Moore to take a series of photographs of spaces where technology is changing how things are made. The photographs have been blown up and appear on each wall of the exhibition space. The five locations – a school, a greenhouse, a shop, a designer’s space and Roberts’s kitchen – were shot at night and lit using only computer or phone screens.

“The exposure was so long that it doesn’t even pick up Angela and her assistant walking around dropping iPhones into plant pots, or the fox that found its way into the greenhouse. The lighting is quite powerful and helps to unify each image,” she says.

The exhibition makes several connections between today’s digital developments and the industrial revolution that began in the late 1700s. This link is also referenced in a collection of laser-cut silhouettes designed by illustrator Mark Hudson and made out of 10mm black perspex. The silhouettes depict rural and industrial scenes from the 16th century to the present day, tracking the development of British manufacturing.

“Each one is three metres long – the maximum size you can work with when laser cutting – and the fine details really tested the technology,” says Roberts. “We wanted the scenes to be quite playful but historically accurate and informative, and chose black to represent the smog and smoke of the first Industrial Revolution. It was fascinating watching people peering at them and trying to identity the different elements, and we were lucky that Mark has a great knowledge of history so had a good idea of what buildings and landmarks to include,” she says.

The UK’s industrial heritage is also referenced in an excellent infographic (below) explaining regional manufacturing identities through the nicknames assigned to football teams, one of a series created by the studio for the show. Sheffield United was nicknamed the Blades, for example, because of the city’s steel industry, while Arsenal’s alias, the Gunners, refers to military arsenal made in the area.

It’s another impressive project from Roberts’s studio – even more so as it was completed in just a month. While most graphics play a supporting role, Roberts’s work for the Design Museum is a central part of the story.

“It was a great project to work on – we really felt like all of our skills were being used, and it was a really collaborative experience. Before I went to art school, I studied stage management and in a way, putting on exhibition graphics is just like putting on a show. The best exhibitions have a bit of theatre and the graphics build the stage that sets the scene,” she adds.

The Future is Here is open until October 29 at the Design Museum, London SE1 2YD. For visitor info see designmuseum.org. To see more of Lucienne Roberts’s work visit luciennerobertsplus.com.

Credits

2D design: Lucienne Roberts, Dave Shaw, John McGill and James Ward, Lucienne Roberts+

3D design: dRMM

Photography: Angela Moore

Illustration: Mark Hudson

Setting up shop: How three Leeds graduates started their own studio

Leeds College of Art graduates Luke O’Brien, Max Gregory and Joe Warburton founded graphic design studio Formula while studying and have been working on the business full-time since completing their degree. We spoke to O’Brien about launching the company and finding work in a competitive environment.

Most of today’s graduates spend the first few weeks after leaving university contacting anyone and everyone who might have work to offer and using up the last few pounds of their interest-free overdraft.

But Luke O’Brien, Max Gregory and Joe Warburton took a different approach. Immediately after their final year exams, the graphic design graduates started working full-time on their own studio, Formula, which they set up after studying a business enterprise module in the second year of their degree.

“We had to create a company and pitch it to our tutors as if they were potential investors. The module taught us a lot of really useful things about running a business, such as how to budget and work out expenses. Max and Joe and I worked together and pitched a branding agency and I think that’s where it all began,” explains O’Brien.

In their third year, the students hired a studio they found on Gumtree and started designing promotional material for friends and family and their end of year degree show, This is Not the End (top). They also won a pitch to design the Leeds College of Art prospectus, but the project was dropped when the university opted for a major rebrand.

“We started putting things in place at the beginning of our third year, because we wanted to be able to walk out of uni and into the studio. We spent most of it building a portfolio that we could use to move forward with as a group after leaving,” adds O’Brien.

Since graduating this summer, O’Brien, Warburton and Gregory have moved to a new office in central Leeds, set up their own website and designed identities, signage and typefaces for a band, a street food vendor and photography and fashion graduates, making use of their art school contacts. They’ve also set up a type foundry with fellow Leeds graduate Yafet Bisrat, an online store selling screen printed and typographic posters and are in the process of brewing, bottling and branding their own beer.

“It’s taken a few months to really get things going, but we’ve been getting quite a few bits of work and each of our clients is completely different,” says O’Brien. “It was tricky to begin with – we didn’t have a break after university and it was hard to stay focussed and motivated – but getting office space and having somewhere to work that wasn’t home or uni was the best thing we did. Even while we were still studying, we treated it as a day job and would work from nine until six whenever we could,” he adds.

Formula’s dream project would be designing graphics for an exhibition or a major sporting event but for now, O’Brien says the group is happy building up a steady stream of clients. “We’ve already ticked some boxes, like designing a record sleeve and at the moment, our aim is to make exciting work that’s affordable, because we feel like good design should be attainable for everyone,” he says.

Running their own business has given the graduates invaluable experience and a chance to earn an income instead of interning for free. While they still feel like they have a lot to learn and wouldn’t rule out work experience, O’Brien says the group are focussing on building the studio’s profile and attracting new clients from Leeds and beyond.

“Some of our friends have been doing internships and having to claim Jobseeker’s Allowance and it’s really tough, because while they learn a lot, they also feel pretty undervalued. We started the studio not only because we thought it would be fun to give it a go, but because we thought it if we couldn’t find a job, we may as well create one.”

It was a brave decision but one that has so far paid off for O’Brien, Warburton and Gregory, and the graduates’ success at managing their business shows just how valuable enterprise modules can be for creative graduates looking to set up their own practice.

To see more of Formula’s work, visit formulastudio.co.uk.

Images (from top): Formula’s branding for this year’s Leeds College of Art end of year show, identity and brand collateral for a fictional film festival, type specimen publications for font foundry Form and Writing, a promotional Formula poster sold at the studio’s online store, external signage made from laser cut and painted wood for Crowder Barbecue, a street food vendor in Leeds, and a logo and identity for fashion graduate Rebekah Hill.

Peter Saville to design identity for Kanye West

Peter Saville

News: graphic designer Peter Saville is working on a visual identity for musician Kanye West.

Saville (pictured) revealed details of the collaboration at the Global Design Forum in London tonight, where he was in conversation with journalist Paul Morley.

“We’re looking at ways of writing ‘Kanye West’,” Saville told Dezeen after the talk, held at the V&A museum as part of the London Design Festival. “What does ‘Kanye’ and ‘Kanye West’ look like written down?”

The designer added the collaboration was open-ended, rather than a commission to design a logo or a specific artwork. “It’s very casual,” he said.

During the talk Saville, who is best-known for his 1980s record covers for bands including New Order and Joy Division, explained how he had discussed the project earlier that day with West, who is in London rehearsing for a performance.

The two talked about Adolphe Mouron Cassandre’s iconic 1961 logo for Yves Saint Laurent, featuring the overlapping letters YSL, Saville said. “He said to me: ‘You’re Cassandre’,” he told Dezeen. “He wants a YSL”.

Kanye West is an avid follower of architecture and design. In 2006 he commissioned minimalist architect Claudio Silvestrin to design his Manhattan apartment, and ordered pieces by designers including the Campana Brothers, Yves Behar and Maarten Baas to furnish it.

“He loves architecture and design, he loves Le Corbusier,” Saville said. “He’d get Le Corbusier to do a building for him if he could.”

Last year, West commissioned architects OMA to build a temporary, seven-screen cinema to host the preview of his first short film.

Saville is the recipient of this year’s London Design Medal. He will receive the award at a ceremony on Wednesday. Read our earlier story for more about the award, and for more details of the conversation with Morley.

See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »
See Dezeen’s map and guide to London Design Festival 2013 »

The post Peter Saville to design identity for Kanye West appeared first on Dezeen.

Alphabets to Octopuses: Children’s books and designers

Every graphic designer seems to have a children’s book in them, says hat-trick‘s Jim Sutherland. Having just recently helped to create one, he considers why so many in the profession, including Alan Fletcher, Paul Rand and Milton Glaser, have decided to work – and play – in the medium…

As designers, often the best time in our job is when we get to play, so it’s no surprise that we like the idea of children as an audience. This was neatly summed up by George Bernard Shaw: “We don’t stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing”.

Working as a professional designer can be incredibly serious. Sometimes it seems that we all have to be grown up far too soon. So when the opportunity to approach projects with a sense of unadulterated joy arises, it’s one we grasp. Even the word ‘unadulterated’ suggests a lack of adults being involved.

Children may be a tough audience but the rewards can be tangible and joyful (how many of our grown-up clients’ faces light up when we present work?) I think there’s a parallel between the joy we feel when solving projects and the reaction of a child who sees it.

When I look at the work of some of my favourite designers, it seems that all of them have made at least one book. It’s great to see designers who are happy to turn from large corporate identities, to a small hardback book to inspire and entertain children, not to mention adults.

I love the idea that one minute they might be doing a title sequence for a Hitchcock film or IBM’s identity, and the next they’re drawing a strange frog. I think it’s this balance of serious and playful work that appeals to us all.

Bizarre animals, typography, cut paper, colours and wit all make an appearance between the pages. What follows is just a personal choice of some my favourites, hardly touching the surface of what designers have created over the years. Feel free to add your own favourites in the comments.

Bruno Munari seems to be a good starting point (see the first two images in the post, above). An amazing designer, educator, writer and publisher. His educational and book work is phenomenal. Some of my favourites include the books ABC and Zoo.

Unsurprisingly, one recurring theme is alphabets and letters. A lovely example of this is Alan Fletcher’s Ant Eaters to Zebras (‘O’ spread shown, above) and the recently published book featuring his ‘abecedarium’.

Another example is the typographic beauty of Alphabeasties by Werner Design Werks. Above is an elephant made, of course, from the letter ‘e’.

Designers have often worked with their partners, too. Paul and Anne Rand published Little One, Sparkle and Spin (above) and I Know a Lot of Things (see ‘dog’ spread, shown above).

Milton and Shirley Glaser collaborated on If Apples had Teeth (above) and The Alphazeds.

While long-time collaborators Saul and Elaine Bass worked together on Henri’s Walk to Paris (above).

Another couple of favourites from the US would have to include Seymour Chwast’s 12 Circus Rings and Get Dressed! (cover shown, above) and Bob Gill’s What Colour is Your World? (below).

Then there are those illustrators who are also obviously designers in their own right. Eric Carle originally worked as graphic designer in the promotion department of The New York Times, before going on to worldwide fame with The Very Hungry Caterpillar (cover shown, below); while Dick Bruna, creator of Miffy, was a graphic designer and illustrator.

More recently we have seen Marion Deuchar’s wonderful drawing books Let’s Make Some Great Art and Let’s Make Some Great Fingerprint Art (below).

And it’s not always just books – just look at Ken Garland’s amazing work for Galt Toys. One of the nicest identity projects ever, where he was designing the toys themselves as well as all the packaging and all the print.

At hat-trick we have been lucky enough to recently publish a book of our own, Hide & Eek! (below), working with Rebecca Sutherland. Not in the same league as the above, but it’s a start.

Perhaps we could all put more of our efforts and abilities into things to inspire children, rather than spending time discussing brand onions. It would be nice for us and, more importantly, nice for our children, too.

Jim Sutherland is creative director at hat-trick design. Hide & Eek! is out now – more details on the book (which should be read in bed with a torch) in our post on it, here. Art directed by Sutherland and Gareth Howat and designed by Sutherland and Laura Bowman, it is published by Californian publisher Knock Knock and launches in the UK in the autumn.

Vince Frost Typo Circle talk

Graphic designer Vince Frost will return from Australia to London to give the next Typo Circle talk

Entitled Same Shit, Different Country, the talk will compare Frost‘s experience as a designer in Australia, where he has lived for the past nine years, with his former career in London.

The talk will be on September 24 at the JWT ad agency in London’s Knightsbridge. Tickets are £10 for members (£6 for student memebrs) and £16 for non-members (£10 for students). Details are here

Following Frost, the Typo Circle will also be presenting talks from book designer David Pearson on October 24 and 8vo co-founder Hamish Muir on November 28

Romek Marber: Graphics

Promotional sign for the Penguin Crime series, designed by Romek Marber, on the floor of the Minories Gallery space. Image courtesy The Minories Galleries

Colchester School of Art’s Minories Galleries has launched a new exhibition on the work of graphic designer Romek Marber. Best known for his innovative Penguin Crime Series, the show also provides a chance to see his work for The Economist, the Observer Magazine and a range of other clients…

Born in Poland in 1925, as a teenager Marber was deported to the Bochnia ghetto in 1939. Three year’s later, he was saved from being transported to the Belzec death camp by the actions of a sergeant Kurzbach, the commander of the forced-labour workshop in the town.

Various Penguin-related material designed by Marber

Marber arrived in the UK in 1946, reuniting with his father and brother, and studied at St Martins in the early 1950s, before attending the Royal College of Art in 1953.

Having worked on covers for The Economist, in 1961 Penguin’s Germano Facetti commissioned the young designer to design two book covers for the author Simeon Potter before giving Marber the chance to work across an entire sequence of titles for Penguin Crime.

“To launch the new Crime series I was asked to do twenty titles,” the designer recalled in a talk given to the Penguin Collectors Society in 2007 (later published in the book, Penguin By Illustrators). “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.”

Penguin Crime covers

The design approach – the ‘Marber grid’ – which evolved from his work was so successful that, as Rick Poynor suggests, “Facetti applied it, effectively unchanged, to the blue Pelicans and to the orange covers of Penguin fiction. Before long its spirit pervaded the entire list.”

Some examples of Marber’s covers for The Economist from 1960-67. Image courtesy The Minories Galleries

While Marber’s Crime series has become a classic of modern book design (though at the time his role in its development was underplayed), the Minories Gallery covers his wider graphic output, and includes images of his earlier covers for The Economist (which had led Facetti to invite him to Penguin), New Society, Robert Nicholson’s London Guides, Town, Queen and the Observer, where he worked as the Magazine’s first art director in 1964.

From 1964-65 Marber was appointed as art director launching the Observer Magazine and continued until 1966 as design consultant. Image courtesy The Minories Galleries

Curated by Kaavous Clayton, Graphics also has displays of Marber’s lesser known logo and identity work (below, left), including a series of panels of designs for the wire fencing company, Norvic (second image, below) in which a familiar shade of green pops up once again.

Now in his 88th year, Marber has rightly assumed his position as one of the most interesting and important graphic designers to have worked in Britain – his efforts in book publishing alone are worthy of an entire exhibition. This new show looks to widen his appeal to those interested in the history of book design and also in the development of mid-century graphics.

Romek Marber: Graphics is at the Minories Galleries, Colchester School of Art, 74 High Street, Colchester CO1 1UE. until October 26. More details at colchester.ac.uk/art/minories.

Work for the London Planetarium, above right

Unpaid placements an “abhorrent abuse” says D&AD’s Tim Lindsay as charity launches WPP tie-up

D&AD CEO Tim Lindsay has vehemently attacked unpaid internships in the creative industries as WPP partners with the charity to back its New Blood Academy programme, which will now include a number of paid apprenticeships for young creatives…

“Unpaid placements are an abhorrent abuse of a desperation [by graduates] to get into the industry,” says Lindsay. “Agencies that do that are beyond the pale.”

With the D&AD-WPP scheme, he continues, “if you’re doing work, you’re going to get paid”. The partnership sees WPP make a significant contribution to the D&AD Foundation to open up industry opportunities for graduates. As well as backing the New Blood Academy – a two-week programme of talks, discussions and workshops designed to help graduates make the leap into the industry – WPP will offer a number (the exact amount is yet to be confirmed) of three-month paid apprenticeships at its agencies, which include Ogilvy, JWT, CHI & Partners, Y&R, Grey, AKQA, The Partners, Landor, The Brand Union, Coley Porter Bell, Fitch and Digit.

This link up comes at a time when unpaid internships within the industry are under renewed scrutiny, not least because of comments reportedly made by D&AD chairman Dick Powell during a speech at the New Designers exhibition in London in July. Dezeen reported that Powell had said that graduates should be prepared to “work for nothing” in order to break into the industry. Powell subsequently refuted this and sought to clarify his position on the D&AD website and on Dezeen after reporting of the speech had resulted in a great deal of criticism. Lindsay’s comments today emphasise D&AD’s official stance on internships (detailed here).

The partnership with WPP follows an earlier sponsorship package between D&AD and Unilever, who supported the inaugural White Pencil award in 2012. Lindsay is keen for the charity to continue such connections with major businesses relevant to the industry. “Talent is the lifeblood of our industry,” he says. “It makes good business sense for agencies, networks and groups to invest in our future creative leaders. We hope that WPP’s backing will encourage others in the industry to follow their lead and help drive change in creative departments across the country.”

30 tones in 30 days

Today Yahoo! launched its new logo (above), following an experiment in which they released 30 logo variations in 30 days. Given the importance of brand language, Nick Asbury thought he’d explore a tone of voice equivalent – from ‘cloying’ and ‘hipster’ to ‘inexplicably tangential’…

As a marketing exercise, Yahoo’s logo project has certainly won a lot of attention, albeit creating more heat than light [CR’s Patrick covered the initial announcement and what it might mean for the brand; while both Design Week and Brand New have written good pieces about the project today.]

The gradual release of 30 iterations could have been an interesting idea if it had been handled as a genuine exploration of the brand, enlightening the public about the thinking behind it and involving them in the process.

Unfortunately, it’s been executed on such a bizarrely simplistic level that it comes across as a parody, no doubt reinforcing everyone’s worst preconception about branding – namely, that it’s just a matter of superficial visual decoration, like picking out a new set of curtains. (That’s the standard analogy anyway – do people still pick out sets of curtains? I suppose they do.)

Given the importance of brand language these days, it struck me that the whole exercise was crying out for a copywriting treatment. So I had a go at writing 30 tones of voice for Yahoo! in 30 days. It’s not entirely serious, although Yahoo! already appear to be using a version of Defensive.

1. Cloying (our existing tone)
Yahoo! makes it easier to discover the news and information that you care about most.

2. Punchy
Yahoo! All the news and info you need – today.

3. Story-telling
It all started way back when we decided to start Yahoo! So began our quest to make it easier for folks to find the news and information they care about. And that mission continues today. Same as it ever was. But different.

4. Sophisticated poetry
Yahoo! makes it easier
to discover the news
and information
that you care
about
most.

5. Infantilising
Hello, I’m some Yahoo! copy. I’m here to tell you all about Yahoo! Please read me and see what you think. Thank-yahoo!

6. Visionary
At Yahoo!, we believe in a world where everyone, without exception, can access the news and information they care about most passionately: for the benefit of humanity.

7. Dialogue
– Who are you?
– We’re Yahoo!
– What do you do?
– We make it easier to find the news and information you need.
– Like Google?
– Yes, but different and more entertaining.
– But basically like Google?
– Can we discuss a redraft?

8. Inexplicably tangential
Cows are great at eating grass and mooing. But one thing they can’t do is make it easier to discover the news and information that you care about. For that, you need Yahoo!

Yahoo! News, not moos.

9. Sad
If we’re honest, the exclamation mark at the end of our name is a grammatical rictus grin that we wear habitually to distract ourselves from the undeniable reality of the fact that we work for Yahoo!

10. Defensive
Yahoo! is genuinely here to make it easier to discover the news and information that you care about. And that’s not a bad thing, is it? We may not be the best at what we do, but a lot of people like it and that’s an achievement, isn’t it? What have you done with your life?

11. Rhyming
We’re Yahoo!
And we do
what we do
for people like you.

12. Designer confidence
We Are YahooTM

13. Hesitant
Yahoo?

14. Mature
Yahoo.

15. Pretentious
Yahoo;

16. Annoying
Yahoo:-)

17. Hipster
Yahoo_

18. Northern
Yahoo! Ya bastard!

19. Unnecessarily aggressive
Yahoo the f–k do you think you’re talking to?

20. Scientific
News + information x now = Yahoo!

NB: This project was abandoned at Day 20 due to inexplicable lack of public interest.

A version of this article was originally posted on checkthis.com/yahootone and is reproduced with permission.

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