What is the future of type?

“There will always be type, and as long as designers like difference, there will always be unusual typefaces for eccentric applications.” So believes designer and author Steven Heller, but what do you think the future holds for type?

Designer Sarah Hyndman has been posing the question (via #Futureoftype) in preparation for an event at the St Bride Workshop on May 2. Part of her Type Tasting series, it promises to be “a workshop exploring Victorian display typefaces from the St Bride Library collection whilst discussing the future of type.

“Type samples from the collection will be available as templates so you can recreate the letters by hand,” Hyndman says. “These will range from Grotesque sans serifs of the 19th century to the decorative letters by Louis Jean Pouchée. During the evening you will hand render tweets received about the topic. These will be combined to create the Steampunk style Twitter feed and form the basis for the group discussion.”

As well as Heller, various other design luminaries have shared their view:

“The future of type is the same as football: everyone does it, and even more people have an opinion about it. Only a few make a living out of it, and some of these are very good,” says designer, educator, typographer Petr van Blokland while when Design Week posed the question to Erik Spiekermann, he responded “You might as well ask “What is the future of mankind?”. Why could anybody ask such a general and unspecific question? I’ll still answer it. The future of type is the past of type: visual language. As long as we speak and write, we’ll have type. Different voices, different messages, different media: different type.” Quite.

Details here

 

Out now, the May 2013 issue of Creative Review is our biggest ever. Features over 100 pages of the year’s best work in the Creative Review Annual 2013 (in association with iStockphoto), plus profiles on Morag Myerscough, Part of a Biggler Plan and Human After All as well as analysis, comment, reviews and opinion

You can buy Creative Review direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe, save money and have CR delivered direct to your door every month. If you subscribe before May 3, you will get the Annual issue thrown in for free. The offer also applies to anyone renewing their subscription. Details here

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

Exhibition shows off Paul Catherall’s prints

A large-scale solo show by printmaker and illustrator Paul Catherall features the latest of his distinctive linocut prints. Many recent commissions for the likes of the Southbank Centre, long-standing client Transport for London, Google and law firm Pinsent Masons will be on show.

The work of Catherall is eminently recognisable in the simplicity and boldness of its composition and linocut execution. Inspired by mid-20th century travel posters and designers such as Tom Eckersley and Tom Purvis, Catherall developed his own style, increasingly informed by his printing method.

It’s about a “quality that’s fairly abstract, where elements are missing and your eye does your work for you”, he says. “I’m exploring what to leave out rather than what to leave in, and getting the negative shapes to do the work.”

While studying illustration, Catherall also started to enjoy the “laborious, messy method” of linocut printing. Initially, he appreciated the way it would allow him to recreate an old litho style, but gradually he became obsessed with the process. “The more you get into the print process, the more you become obsessed with the sheet of the ink and the finish you get,” he says. “The whole feel and textures just becomes a slight obsession.”

Paul Catherall’s take on Portcullis House

His work graces numerous London institutions, not surprising given his inclination to depict the capital’s landmarks – the celebrated and despised alike – including the new Shard (see ‘Pink Shard, above, created as a one-off artist’s cover for Wallpaper magazine).

From top: Telecom Yellow by Paul Catherall, commissioned by Google; Telecom and Barbican, commissioned by Pinsent Masons; East Finchley, commissioned by Transport for London

Each print takes several weeks to complete, and Catherall enjoys the fact that the process combines the physical and the creative. “I think it does show. With everything you can generally see the time that’s gone into it.”

And as for those landmarks, Catherall says he will never get bored of them: “It’s usually that I want to revisit something; you  become less bored and far more involved,” he says. “I’ve become a bit obsessive.”

Paul Catherall at the Gallery@OXO (Oxo Tower Wharf, Bargehouse Street, London SE1) runs from May 1-19. A limited edition of prints is available for sale.

Out now, the May 2013 issue of Creative Review is our biggest ever. Features over 100 pages of the year’s best work in the Creative Review Annual 2013 (in association with iStockphoto), plus profiles on Morag Myerscough, Part of a Biggler Plan and Human After All as well as analysis, comment, reviews and opinion

You can buy Creative Review direct from us here. Beter yet, subscribe, save money and have CR delivered direct to your door every month. If you subscribe before May 3, you will get the Annual issue thrown in for free. The offer also applies to anyone renewing their subscription. Details here

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

Design Studio of the Year

Each year in the Creative Review Annual we choose a Design Studio of the Year. Our winner this time is an in-house studio which has consistently delivered powerful, original work that has revived a sector of the media industry

There’s some brilliant design work in this year’s Annual, as you might expect. Spin has several outstanding projects in our pages, while it’s great to see Brazil, Canada, Australia, the US and mainland Europe represented.

But we have chosen to recognise an in-house design team which has had an enormous impact on its industry. Under creative director Richard Turley, (not forgetting editor Josh Tyrangiel) Bloomberg Businessweek has trounced its rivals with a verve and energy that recalls the heyday of the printed magazine.

Set-piece editions in which the decks are cleared for total devotion to one topic have become a speciality of the magazine – its valedictory Steve Jobs issue being particularly successful. In our June 2012 issue our columnist Jeremy Leslie revealed the working process of the Bloomberg Businessweek team as it put together the issue (images above, you can read his piece here).

 

Last November, the team did it again with its Election Issue, shown here and chosen as one of our Best in Book winners for The Annual.

The Election issue takes as its starting point a famous speech by Ronald Reagan in which he asked the American people whether they felt better or worse off than they had been four years ago and applies that test to Obama’s period in office.

It opens with a double-page, black and white shot of the President’s inauguration on January 29, 2009 overlaid with facts about the state of the nation at that point.

 

From there, using the full range of modern visual storytelling weaponry, it takes a long hard look at what has happened to the US since. The cost of living, the changing nature of employment, financial, security and housing issues are all investigated with enormous verve and invention.

 

 

This is a tour-de-force of brilliant, visually-led storytelling. It is magazine publishing at its best, flexing every muscle of the editorial process to deliver a depth and quality of content unmatched elsewhere in the news weekly sector.

 

But it’s not just in these special editions that Bloomberg Businessweek delivers. It consistently produces powerful covers and features which offer a compelling case for the future of print media and the vital role that design has to play in that. Congratulations to creative director Richard Turley and all his team. With its combination of editorial and visual punch, Bloomberg Businessweek has, for the moment, given a sector of the media industry new hope.

 

Election Issue design team: Creative Director: Richard Turley. Design Director: Cynthia Hoffman. Art Director: Robert Vargas. Graphics Director: Jennifer Daniel. Director of Photography: David Carthas. Deputy Photo Editor: Emily Keegin. Designers: Shawn Hasto, Chandra Illick, Tracy Ma, Maayan Pearl, Lee Wilson. Graphics: Evan Applegate, Christopher Nosenzo. Photo Editors: Alis Atwell, Donna Cohen, Jamie Goldenberg, Diana Suryakusuma, Jane, Yeomans, Meagan Ziegler-Haynes. Art Manager: Emily Anton

 


The Creative Review Annual is published in association with iStockphoto.

You can buy the May Annual issue direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe and you will not only save money but will be guaranteed to receive CR (and Monograph) every month. If you subscribe before May 3, you will get the Annual issue thrown in for free. The offer also applies to anyone renewing their subscription. Details here

CR May issue: The Annual

Our May issue is the biggest CR ever, weighing in at over 230 pages. It’s our Annual special, with over 100 pages of the best work of the year in visual communications combined with a regular issue containing our usual mix of interviews, opinion and reviews

The CR Annual, in association with iStockphoto, is our round-up of the best work of the year, as chosen by our panel of judges. The judges also choose what they deem to be the best of the best in our Best in Book section.

 

We have also chosen our design studio, client and ad agency of the year – details in the issue.

Once you’ve finished perusing the Annual, turn over for a regular issue of the magazine where you will find a host of features relating to the work selected for the Annual this year. This includes a major profile piece on Morag Myerscough, whose Cathedral Café project features in The Annual and who also designed our cover this month

 

Here’s a film of Morag and her team making the cover:

 

We also interview Christian Borstlap from Part of a Biggler Plan in Amsterdam, whose work for Louis Vuitton has featured in several of our Annuals

 

 

One thing our graphics jury noticed about the work entered this year was how nostalgic much of it was. In particular, there was a trend for what we termed ‘Austerity Graphics’ – post-war British replete with sugary pastel colours. We explore the rise of this trend and look back at graphic design’s abiding addiction to referencing the past

 

Another trend discussed by our judges was the increasing importance of the ‘PR stunt’ in advertising: we explore what effect this is having on ad agency creative departments and the skills of those who work there

 

And, in our final profile piece, we met Human After All, the creative agency formed by the design team behind Little White Lies magazine

 

In our Crit section, Wayne Ford reviews Jo Metson Scott’s new book of photographs of soldiers who have opposed the Iraq war

 

James Pallister looks at how microsites have become a new platform for protest, Gordon Comstock discusses the tensionbetween branding’s desire for consistency and advertising’s search for originality, MIchale Evamy discusses brands which play with concealing their identity, Daniel Benneworth-Grey ruminates on the difficulties of working for that most demanding client (yourself) an Paul Belford applauds the risk-taking in a classic ad for Alexon produced by the combined talents of Richard Avedon, Paul Arden and Tim Mellors

 

And, if that wasn’t enough, our subscribers can also enjoy a fabulous collection of Cuban posters produced by the Organisation in Solidarity with the People of Africa, Asia, and Latin America, in this month’s Monograph

 

You can buy the May Annual issue direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe and you will not only save money but will be guaranteed to receive CR (and Monograph) every month. If you subscribe before May 3, you will get the Annual issue thrown in for free. The offer also applies to anyone renewing their subscription. Details here

 

Thanks to everyone who entered The Annual this year, our judges, and to all our sponsors: iStockphoto, Microsoft, Shadowplay, Cake Factory, Streamtime, Agency Rush and Fasthosts Internet

Fontsmith’s FS Emeric launch campaign

London type design studio Fontsmith has launched its latest font family, FS Emeric, with a specimen book designed by Blair Thomson of Believe in – plus a set of type posters designed by eleven top studios including Bibliotheque, Build, DixonBaxi, Pentagram and Non-Format…

FS Emeric is the result of over two years work by Fontsmith’s type design director, Phil Garnham, who set out to create a humanist alternative to classic modernist fonts. “The timeless alphabets of the fifties have a deliberate neutrality born out of an unfaltering mechanical solidity in each line and curve,” he says. “FS Emeric has been designed to share this sense of structure and universality but it also introduces a new approach, intuitively informed by a sense of today, one of progress and optimism.”

The typeface itself is made up of eleven weights – Thin, Extra Light, Light, Book, Regular, Core, Medium, Semi Bold, Bold, Extra Bold and Heavy – each with a corresponding italic.

To launch it, Garnham charged Exeter-based design studio Believe in to create a type sampler that showcased its diversity. The resulting booklet (printed beautifully in four spot colours with two foils on GF Smith paper – cover shown above) features a host of graphic illustrations (including the topmost image in this post) that show how the fonts might be used in a wide range of applications from packaging, signage and screen-based designs. Here are some images:

“Our goals with the campaign were twofold,” explains Believe in’s Blair Thomson, “to demonstrate FS Emeric’s potential and to show off its extraordinary range and versatility. We’ve tried to capture a sense of possibility, so it feels expressive while preserving a pure typographic approach.”

As well as the lovingly printed type sampler, the typeface’s launch campaign also incorporated a poster project for which Fontsmith approached eleven different design studios, asking each to produce a poster using one of the typeface’s eleven weights. “The thinking for the poster series was shaped by three words that represented the character of FS Emeric, Optimistic, Adventurous and Ambitious” explains Thomson. “Each studio was given the same minimal brief and trusted to surprise and delight us with their interpretation.”

Here’s a look at the posters:


Studio Hey in Barcenlona’s approach was to match the tone of the typeface’s Bold weight with a friendly “hello”.


Non-Format
‘s poster features lyrics from David Bowie’s Berlin Trilogy (tracks Low, Heroes and Lodger).


Pentagram
‘s poster shows the full-stop of the Core weight of FS Emeric at 11,750 point size, thus celebrating one of the typeface’s unique design details.


“I really enjoyed working with [the ExtraBold weight of] the font,” says Bernd Kuchenbeiser of Atelier Bernd Kuchenbeiser of his poster (above). “It has so many fabulous details, like the apostrophes [which] I fell instantly in love with.”


Manual‘s Anti-hero poster, the San Francisco-based studio’s Tom Crabtree explains, “is based on the widely held assumption that the deliberate neutrality of modernist typefaces can be seen as ‘the hero with a thousand faces’ of the font world.”


Charged with using the typeface’s Heavy weight, NB Studio decided to name some of their favourite heavy metal bands – eleven to be precise, a nod to the volume knobs on Spinal Tap’s famous amplifiers

Lundgren+Lindqvist in Gothenburg riffed on the idea of Extra Light, tasking a 14 year old field trip student to set the type for  the above poster.


Rotterdam-based Studio Dumbar created its poster using thousands of individual characters from the Medium and Medium Italic styles.


Meanwhile DixonBaxi‘s poster was inspired by the “history of the expression ‘Time and tide wait for no man'”, according to the studio’s Steve Johnston. “We used visual references from the font to craft the iconography, creating an image that aimed to capture the combined essence of the font and the phrase,” he adds.


Meanwhile, Michael C Place of Build combined FS Emeric’s lyrical bounce with his love of Hip Hop to create the above poster which lists all the samples featured on Public Enemy’s album It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back.


“The idea came from looking at the details of the font that help define it,” says Bibliothèque‘s Jonathon Jeffrey of his studio’s approach to the Thin weight poster, above. “We liked the abstracted shapes we got when cropping into these and the fact that the Thin font became bolder and more pictorial at scale.”

Believe in designed a twelfth poster (above) and all 12 have been screenprinted in editions of 50 by Dan Mather on to A1 175gsm Colorplan stock and hand numbered. Fontsmith is giving away a randomly selected poster when two or more weights of FS Emeric are purchased (while stocks last).

To find out more about the typeface, you can visit its own microsite at fsemeric.com.

The April print issue of CR presents the work of three young animators and animation teams to watch. Plus, we go in search of illustrator John Hanna, test out the claims of a new app to have uncovered the secrets of viral ad success and see how visual communications can both help keep us safe and help us recover in hospital

Buy your copy here.

Please note, CR now has a limited presence on the newsstand at WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at train stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your WH Smith store or a local independent newsagent can order it for you. You can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, call us on 020 7970 4878, or buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

Gin and geometry

United Creatives have produced a rather beautiful label for Dodd’s Gin, inspired by trigonometry, geometry and engineering diagrams

Dodd’s Gin is a new, ’boutique’ brand from The London Distillery Company and is sold through at Fortnum & Mason (price, £37.50). The label, United say, “pays tribute to Ralph Dodd, an 18th century born engineer and entrepreneur [who founded the London Distillery Company]. As well as looking at trigonometry, geometry and engineering diagrams from Dodd’s time, we created a label that has genuine British feel for a genuine British spirit.”

 

The studio worked with letterpress printers Blush Publishing on the job which is printed in three colours. Each label is numbered before being applied to the bottles by hand  – the labels were kiss-cut to make that process easier.

The job on press at Blush Publishing

 

Out now, the May 2013 issue of Creative Review is our biggest ever. Features over 100 pages of the year’s best work in the Creative Review Annual 2013 (in association with iStockphoto), plus profiles on Morag Myerscough, Part of a Biggler Plan and Human After All as well as analysis, comment, reviews and opinion

You can buy Creative Review direct from us here. Beter yet, subscribe, save money and have CR delivered direct to your door every month. If you subscribe before May 3, you will get the Annual issue thrown in for free. The offer also applies to anyone renewing their subscription. Details here

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

 

Morag makes the CR Annual cover

The cover image for this year’s Creative Review Annual (out this week) was created by Morag Myerscough in her inimitable hand-crafted style. See how she did it

 

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Here’s the final cover – the issue will be out tomorrow

 

Myerscough, as well as having work selected for The Annual this year, is also the subject of a major profile piece in the magazine this month. You can buy a copy direct from us here

 

See more of her work here

The business of Acumen

In 2001, Acumen became one of the first of a new breed of ‘impact investment’ companies providing investment in the developing world. Twelve years on, johnson banks has designed a new identity for the organisation and collaborated on a manifesto for the work it does in tackling world poverty…

Founded by the author Jacqueline Novogratz, Acumen has so far sought out business ideas in India, Pakistan, West and East Africa, supporting projects that, it says, deliver goods and services to low-income people – investment that puts social impact before financial return (Acumen calls this “patient” capital).

“For ten years, they were happy to trade as a ‘fund’,” say johnson banks, who have spent 17 months working on the branding project. “And as the organisation gears up for growth it will continue to search for companies that bring critical, affordable goods and services to the world’s poor. But with a growing worldwide network of fundraising ‘chapters’ and a global fellowship programme, it’s become about much more than just investing in companies.”

While the aims of Acumen sit somewhere between philanthropy and venture capitalism, johnson banks has a history of working with campaigning identities, especially within the charity sector. Michael Johnson wrote about how this market has changed in the last 15 years in a post for CR in February (here), where he noted that various rebrands (Shelter, YWCA, the Anthony Nolan Trust, for example) had sought to “clarify” exactly what the aims of a particular organisation were.

“The tipping point in the UK came when large charities began to ‘activate’ their names in a similar way,” Johnson wrote. “Macmillan Cancer Research amended their name to Macmillan Cancer Support, then incorporated it into a series of ‘we’ statements. Backed up by a relatively big adspend, we all soon saw ‘We are Macmillan’.”

To this end, the London studio has helped to devise a new identity for Acumen, as well as construct a manifesto for its aims and objectives – clarifying its purpose in the process.

The text is now being used as the cornerstone of of speeches and broken down into smaller units, say the designers, where “‘mini’ manifestos [below] are embedded into Acumen’s eight different logos that can be swapped in and out at will”.

Having shortened the brand name from Acumen Fund to Acumen, the studio then looked at ways of communicating their work.

“The organisation was widely admired and their brand reputation was great,” say johnson banks. “But their brand identity did not match the strength of this reputation, and how they had evolved. After dozens of drafts straightforward brand ‘narrative’ moved to an altogether higher level and together we produced a manifesto, which has become the key focus of the new brand.

“Their ‘A’ is deliberately left unfinished, to communicate that their work is never complete, that they don’t have all the answers, and that they can’t change the way the world tackles poverty alone. The new brand colours, typefaces and angles are carried across a comprehensive rebrand.”

The incomplete ‘A’ is, for me, a clever way of communicating the daunting task ahead for Acumen, but also that its success is dependent upon collaboration with others. That the ‘mini’ manifestos can sit alongside the ‘A’ offers a certain amount of flexibility, too, in terms of slotting in a particular ambition or aim – dependent on the context.

Here is the text of the manifesto in full:

Acumen: it starts by standing with the poor, listening to voices unheard, and recognizing potential where others see despair.

It demands investing as a means, not an end, daring to go where markets have failed and aid has fallen short. It makes capital work for us, not control us.

It thrives on moral imagination: the humility to see the world as it is, and the audacity to imagine the world as it could be. It’s having the ambition to learn at the edge, the wisdom to admit failure, and the courage to start again.

It requires patience and kindness, resilience and grit: a hard-edged hope. It’s leadership that rejects complacency, breaks through bureaucracy, challenges corruption, and does what’s right, not what’s easy.

Acumen: it’s the radical idea of creating hope in a cynical world. Changing the way the world tackles poverty and building a world based on dignity.

According to the organisation, since 2001 Acumen has invested more than $83 million in 73 companies around the world, impacting an estimated 100 million lives.

See acumen.org, johnsonbanks.co.uk.

Brand strategy and design: johnson banks. Animation: johnson banks and Martin Shannon. Web design: briteweb.com. Music by Steve Rio

Derelict nightclub reborn as secret street art gallery

Work by YZ at Les Bains. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

50 of the world’s finest street artists have been given the run of a derelict nightclub in the heart of Paris

Les Bains-Douches, a stone’s throw from the Pompidou Centre, was built in 1885 as a municipal bathhouse. More recently, as Les Bains, it became one of the coolest nightclubs in Paris, in its time a favourite haunt of Mick Jagger, Kate Moss, Johnny Depp and Andy Warhol. But some over-enthusiastic DIY work by the nightclub’s director led to the building being declared a safety hazard and in 2010, it was ordered to be closed.

 

By Julien Malland Seth. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

The following year, owner Jean-Pierre Marois formed La Société des Bains to try to preserve the building, eventually securing its future as a new venue which will open in 2014. But what to do with the derelict building in the meantime?

“In keeping with the artistic soul of the place, we have transformed this dead time into a fleeting, creative buzz,” Marois declared on Les Bains’ website. “Les Bains will host an Artists’ Residency, and the whole building will be offered as a giant canvas for a plethora of urban artists commissioned by Magda Danysz.”

 

Sambre work in progress. Photo Jérôme Coton

 

From January this year, 50 renowned street artists have had the run of the building, turning it into a 3,000 square meter gallery, albeit one that is inaccessible to the public. Marois and gallery owner Magda Danysz invited artists including Futura, Space Invader and Sambre to use material drawn from the building – electricity, ripped-up floorboards, rubble and spray paint – to capture its former energy. Smashed disco balls are a recurring motif.

YZ. Photo Jérôme Coton

 

On April 29, renovation work will begin. None of the artworks will be preserved. “There’s a certain absurdity that I like,” says Marois of the project. “Not many people will see it, it’s all going to disappear.”

Not without trace, however. Two full-time photographers are documenting work in progress for the website; Danysz is publishing a catalogue of the event.

 

Scratchpaper. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

Lek&Sowat. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

L’atlas. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

JF-Julian. Photo: Jérôme Coton

 

1984. Photo Jérôme Coton

LEK. Photo: Jérôme Coton

It may be the end of a legend, but Les Bains is going out in style.

 

Images courtesy Galerie Magda Danysz

 


The April print issue of CR presents the work of three young animators and animation teams to watch. Plus, we go in search of illustrator John Hanna, test out the claims of a new app to have uncovered the secrets of viral ad success and see how visual communications can both help keep us safe and help us recover in hospital

Buy your copy here.

Please note, CR now has a limited presence on the newsstand at WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at train stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your WH Smith store or a local independent newsagent can order it for you. You can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, call us on 020 7970 4878, or buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

What would the designer say?

Suffering from designer’s block? Well, The Designer Says might be the answer – it’s a small book packed full of musings from some of the industry’s finest…

The Designer Says is a compendium of design wisdom, culled from a range of practitioners from El Lissitzky to Frank Chimero, with pointers from the likes of Peter Saville, Paula Scher, Irma Boom and many others in between.

Cleverly, the quotes are paired up thematically, thus providing two opinions on a similar subject, be it designing for mundane objects (as above), colour choices, or the minutiae of the design process itself.

The book is compiled by Sara Bader of quotenik.com and is published by Princeton Architectural Press (£8.99). UK readers can purchase the book here, if you’re in the US, see papress.com.

Here are a few of our favourite examples.

Chip Kidd and Erik Spiekermann on what makes a better graphic designer.

Irma Boom and Barbara deWilde on the ‘unrefined’ approach to work.

Seymour Chwast and Wim Crouwel on colour (well, on two colours).

Tibor Kalman and Andrew Blauvelt on the finer points of working relationships.

Peter Saville and Stuart Bailey on the nature of ‘graphic design’ itself.

Gail Anderson and Bruno Munari on the design process.

Stephen Doyle and Charles Eames on studio culture.

And finally, Michael Bierut and Matthew Carter on the notion of authenticity in contemporary design.

 

The April print issue of CR presents the work of three young animators and animation teams to watch. Plus, we go in search of illustrator John Hanna, test out the claims of a new app to have uncovered the secrets of viral ad success and see how visual communications can both help keep us safe and help us recover in hospital

Buy your copy here.

Please note, CR now has a limited presence on the newsstand at WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at train stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your WH Smith store or a local independent newsagent can order it for you. You can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, call us on 020 7970 4878, or buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.