Max Hoffman Designed the Porsche Logo Too?!? Well, Not Exactly…

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Up top: Ferry Porsche and Maximilian Hoffman

In the photo below, of the Frank-Lloyd-Wright-designed Hoffman Auto Showroom, at right you can see the large planter in the center of the rotating car platform. And atop that planter you can see a box with the now-familiar Porsche logo on it. But back then, in 1955, that logo was brand new.

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You’ll recall that the Hoffman Auto Showroom was intended to sell Jaguars; so why, you ask, is it filled with Porsches during its 1955 opening? Hoffman commissioned the space in 1953, but just two years later his business arrangement with Jaguar had evaporated. This wrinkle happened close to the Showroom’s launch date; Frank Lloyd Wright had designed a leaping Jaguar statue to go onto that planter, in the center of the showroom, and Jaguar craftsmen had completed it and shipped it over to New York. After the Jaguar/Hoffman relationship evaporated, the statue was shipped back to Coventry, so the only thing it really leaped was the Atlantic. Twice.

Now back to the Porsche logo. Porsche was a logo-less company until (rumor has it) Ferry Porsche—son of company founder Ferdinand—had lunch in New York with Max Hoffman. The suspiciously colorful story, which contains at least one geographic error, goes like this:

In 1952 while dining in a New York restaurant, Max told Dr. Ferry Porsche all cars of some standing in the world have a crest. “Why not Porsche, too?” he asked. “If all you need is a badge, we can give you one, too!”

Ferry then grabbed a napkin and began to draw the crest for the state of Baden-Wurtremberg [sic] with its curved stag horns. He added a black prancing horse from Stuttgart’s coat of arms and the word PORSCHE across the top and handed it back to Max asking, “How about something like that?” With a bit of refinement and color, the famed Porsche Crest was born and today remains true to Ferry’s original sketch more than half a century ago.

(The error is the attribution of the crest to “Baden-Wurtremberg,” which is both misspelled, and the incorrect region.)

The Internet being what it is, another story has it that Hoffman penned the logo himself. The needle on my BS meter is quivering.

(more…)


Zak Group creates shape-shifting identity for Taipei Biennial

Zak Group has designed and art directed the visual identity and exhibition for the Taipei Biennial 2012, ‘Modern Monsters/Death and Life of Fiction’, creating new typeface Taowu Sans to tie together the imagery as well as the Chinese and English languages.

The overall visual identity is conceived as a constantly shape-shifting expression of the exhibition and interweaves Chinese and Latin characters to suggest multiple readings, according to context and constellation. The typeface is named after the ancient Chinese monster Taowu, a shape-shifting creature that sees both future and the past, which the Biennial refers to in its exploration of modern Chinese history.

According to Zak Group, the visual identity is “ripe with metaphors and powers of evocation, functioning as thought-pictures or ideograms. It is a game of symmetrically mirroring opposites: dark anad light, past and present, fiction and reality”.

This ‘making of’ video explains a bit more:

Rather than taking the form of a static symbol or logo the identity appears as an ever-changing constallation of Chinese and Latin characters. Zak Group designed the typeface in three different iterations. With each version the typography undergoes increasing doubling, mirroring and multiplication of the letterforms. “The objectivity of language becomes doubled and ultimately unstable, which directly relates to the strategies used by artists within the exhibition,” say Zak Group’s Zak Kyes and Grégory Ambos.

The exhibition design was conceived in collaboration with architects Co DKT and Zak Group also applied the identity to dual-language guidebooks, an online and printed journal with related essays, the website and the Biennial promotional outdoors campaign.

The Taipei Biennial 2012 at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum runs until January 13, 2013. Most photos courtesy of Zak Group; installation photograph courtesy Taipei Fine Arts Museum.

CR In print

In our December issue we look at why carpets are the latest medium of choice for designers and illustrators. Plus, Does it matter if design projects are presented using fake images created using LiveSurface and the like? Mark Sinclair looks in to the issue of mocking-up. We have an extract from Craig Ward’s upcoming book Popular Lies About Graphic Design and ask why advertising has been so poor at preserving its past. Illustrators’ agents share their tips for getting seen and we interview maverick director Tony Kaye by means of his unique way with email. In Crit, Guardian economics leader writer Aditya Chakrabortty review’s Kalle Lasn’s Meme Wars and Gordon Comstock pities brands’ long-suffering social media managers. In a new column on art direction, Paul Belford deconstructs a Levi’s ad that was so wrong it was very right, plus, in his brand identity column, Michael Evamy looks at the work of Barcelona-based Mario Eskenazi. And Daniel Benneworth-Gray tackles every freelancer’s dilemma – getting work.

Our Monograph this month, for subscribers only, features the EnsaïmadART project in which Astrid Stavro and Pablo Martin invited designers from around the world to create stickers to go on the packaging of special edition packaging for Majorca’s distinctive pastry, the ensaïmada, with all profits going to a charity on the island (full story 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 to 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. Try a free sample issue here

Recipeace wins D&AD White Pencil

D&AD’s inaugural White Pencil award has been won by Leo Burnett Chicago for Recipeace, a project that aims to bring people together over a shared meal in support of the Peace One Day initiative

The White Pencil was launched last year, with the support of Unilever, to mark D&AD’s 50th anniversary with the aim of rewarding ‘an idea that has a genuine social impact’. D&AD teamed up with Peace One Day, the movement begun by filmmaker Jeremy Gilley with the aim of instituting Peace Day, a global ceasefire on September 21 each year. Entrants to the White Pencil award were asked for ideas which would ‘grow awareness of and engagement with Peace Day’. Those ideas had to actually run this year, rather than just be concepts.

The winner, announced at D&AD’s White Pencil Symposium last night, describes itself as ‘a social movement that brings people together over food. The intent is to build awareness for Peace Day on a global scale, while inspiring peaceful action on an individual level’.

 

 

To test the idea, Leo Burnett Chicago worked with local organisations committed to working for peace in the Middle East, bringing them together over a lunch to discuss the issues. Seventy-five local restaurants, chefs and food trucks joined the movement and promoted the idea in the city. Recipeace branded olive oil bottles and place mats were put on tables to tell the story of the project and raise awareness of Peace Day. Postcards which came with the bill in participating restaurants (one shown above) pointed people to the Recipeace website, which had recipes for creating your own ‘Peace Meals’.

 

 

 

Is it a worthy winner? It certainly scores in terms of growing engagement with the Peace Day idea, providing a practical and easy to replicate method for people anywhere to get involved. And the idea of sharing a meal with those who you may be in conflict with is a universal and a powerful one. It does, however create quite a strong, albeit complimentary and very well-executed, brand in its own right. The original brief was all about promoting Peace Day – Recipeace does that tangenitally but in terms of a direct response to the brief that is purely in the service of Peace Day, perhaps the student winner (shown below) was stronger?

 

Earlier this year, Martin Headon and Olly Wood from the School of Communication Arts 2.0 won the student White Pencil category for their idea to work with computer games brand EA Sports to establish a global ceasefire among game players during Peace Day. Their concept involved asking players of EA’s Battlefield 3 game to lay down their virtual arms on September 21 – they could even take part in a Word War One style ceasefire kickabout in EA’s football game FIFA 12. A clever, powerful idea to enagage a difficult to reach global audience in an appropriate and novel way.

The difference, of course, is that the professional winner had to have run whereas the student entries were just concepts. Would EA have gone with Headon and Wood’s idea? You would have liked to think so.

There were 19 projects shortlisted for the White Pencil, with two shortlisted in addition to Recipeace – Blood Relations (above) from Baumann Ber Rivnay Saatchi & Saatchi and The Peace Flag (below) from Ogilvy & Mather London. For details on those projects and more on the White Pencil, see D&AD’s website here.

D&AD says that the White Pencil will be incorporated into the main professional awards next year and is open for all design work and creative campaigns for both brands and not-for-profits.

 

 

 

CR In print

In our December issue we look at why carpets are the latest medium of choice for designers and illustrators. Plus, Does it matter if design projects are presented using fake images created using LiveSurface and the like? Mark Sinclair looks in to the issue of mocking-up. We have an extract from Craig Ward’s upcoming book Popular Lies About Graphic Design and ask why advertising has been so poor at preserving its past. Illustrators’ agents share their tips for getting seen and we interview maverick director Tony Kaye by means of his unique way with email. In Crit, Guardian economics leader writer Aditya Chakrabortty review’s Kalle Lasn’s Meme Wars and Gordon Comstock pities brands’ long-suffering social media managers. In a new column on art direction, Paul Belford deconstructs a Levi’s ad that was so wrong it was very right, plus, in his brand identity column, Michael Evamy looks at the work of Barcelona-based Mario Eskenazi. And Daniel Benneworth-Gray tackles every freelancer’s dilemma – getting work.

Our Monograph this month, for subscribers only, features the EnsaïmadART project in which Astrid Stavro and Pablo Martin invited designers from around the world to create stickers to go on the packaging of special edition packaging for Majorca’s distinctive pastry, the ensaïmada, with all profits going to a charity on the island (full story 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 to 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. Try a free sample issue here

Shooting Blanks

Image templates enable designers to show proposed work in the best possible light. But, as the realism increases and work spreads online, does it matter that it’s now becoming so much harder to work out just what is real and what isn’t?

With ever-tightening budgets and deadlines, answering a brief often involves showing a new design across a range of applications as quickly and as cheaply as possible.

Carton by LiveSurface

In the new issue of CR (shown above) we examine how, over the last few years, a small crop of designer-focused image libraries, including LiveSurface in the US and PrestoVisual in the UK, have been filling a potentially lucrative gap.

These sites sell templates of billboards, poster sites, business cards, clothes, bags, bottles and boxes – anything that can incorporate a designer’s vision.

Billboard by LiveSurface

In the article, which also considers why crowd-funding site KickStarter recently banned image renderings from its site (and why eBay should never have made its own ‘shopping bags’ render in the first place), we hear from designers David Airey, Armin Vit, Michael Johnson and Simon Manchipp, and also LiveSurface founder, Joshua Distler.

Airport billboard by LiveSurface

It was a joke Manchipp made at his recent talk at TYPO London that made us think there might be a more serious side to all this. On a slide showing the recent Olympics pictograms, designed by his studio SomeOne, he’d added “Guaranteed 100% LiveSurface Free!”

Olympic pictograms by SomeOne in a photograph. A real one

His point was that, yes, the photographs of flags and banners from the Olympic Park were real – this was the studio’s actual work for London 2012, implemented by FutureBrand and fluttering in the wind and everything.

These images weren’t mock-ups, the kinds of renders that his studio and countless others use to show what executions of their work might look like. But – and his joke admitted as such – they could have been.

FastJet poster image by SomeOne, made using LiveSurface

“Context is often critical,” Manchipp says, “and a cold layout fresh from InDesign does little to convey the emotions felt when [the work] is in your hands, printed in a newspaper. So the LiveSurface system is brilliant at rapidly getting design work in context so it can be more realistically viewed by those paying the bills.”

But does it matter that it’s getting harder to tell the difference between the real work and the mock-ups?

Bag mock-up by SomeOne

“It’s when things leak out into the real world that it gets a little surreal,” says Michael Johnson, who believes issues arise due to the relatively short list of applications available for many smaller projects.

“There’s a website, a Facebook header and probably a business card,” he says. “After that? Very few clients can afford to do outdoor ad campaigns or change their signage so the frustrated designer, seeing their scheme get drastically reduced, lets a few of those ‘hypotheticals’ leak out into the real world and, before long, they almost become real themselves.

“Things come to a head when you judge award schemes,” Johnson continues. “The branding section is always crammed with gleaming identities beautifully ‘applied out’ but you know that only a third of them ever happened.”

Those eBay bags

While the eBay ‘shopping bags’ that appeared during the brand’s recent logo redesign were misplaced to say the least, rendering certainly has its uses to professional designers. For David Airey, visualising new work in this way is simply another part of the creative process.

“As soon as it’s out of the designer’s head and onto paper, or onto a computer screen, it’s there for others to see. It’s real,” he says. “The work might not yet be shown to its full capacity, or developed as precisely as it will be in future, but it’s there, forming the basis of the more tangible items that can follow.”

For the full story, with more from all the designers mentioned above, see our December issue, out now.


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 to 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 In print

In our December issue we look at why carpets are the latest medium of choice for designers and illustrators. Plus, Does it matter if design projects are presented using fake images created using LiveSurface and the like? Mark Sinclair looks in to the issue of mocking-up. We have an extract from Craig Ward’s upcoming book Popular Lies About Graphic Design and ask why advertising has been so poor at preserving its past. Illustrators’ agents share their tips for getting seen and we interview maverick director Tony Kaye by means of his unique way with email. In Crit, Guardian economics leader writer Aditya Chakrabortty review’s Kalle Lasn’s Meme Wars and Gordon Comstock pities brands’ long-suffering social media managers. In a new column on art direction, Paul Belford deconstructs a Levi’s ad that was so wrong it was very right, plus, in his brand identity column, Michael Evamy looks at the work of Barcelona-based Mario Eskenazi. And Daniel Benneworth-Gray tackles every freelancer’s dilemma – getting work.

Our Monograph this month, for subscribers only, features the EnsaïmadART project in which Astrid Stavro and Pablo Martin invited designers from around the world to create stickers to go on the packaging of special edition packaging for Majorca’s distinctive pastry, the ensaïmada, with all profits going to a charity on the island (full story 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. Try a free sample issue here

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert, Neville Brody and Henrik Kubel

Graphic designer Neville Brody has reworked the Royal College of Art’s house font by Margaret Calvert as part of the London institution’s rebrand.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

The RCA asked Neville Brody, who made his name as art director of fashion magazines The Face and Arena and is now dean of communication at the college, to come up with a new identity for its buildings and press material.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

Brody and his design office Research Studios worked with Henrik Kubel, a graphic designer who graduated from the RCA in 2000, to produce the Calvert Brody typeface as a “remixed” version of the college’s house font Calvert.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

The Calvert font is by Margaret Calvert, the graphic designer best known for creating the UK’s road signage system in the 1960s and a former graphic design course director at the college.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

“The idea is like bringing in a producer and doing a remix of music, so I remixed Margaret’s font,” Brody told Dezeen. “I’ve tried to make it both more classical by making it more exaggerated and thick and thin, and at the same time make it more industrial and contemporary, by bringing in the – hopefully interestingly – redrawn pieces plus the stencil.”

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

Calvert Brody will be used throughout the college’s buildings, either sprayed directly onto walls or laser-cut into metal, and will also appear in print and on screen.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

“Hopefully we’ve come up with an interesting typeface that encapsulates a lot of different ideas about the Royal College, which is sort of robust but innovative; it’s slightly non-traditional but at the same time giving a nod to a very traditional source,” Brody added.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

The designers were asked to reflect the college’s history as well its current reputation for innovative design and fine art practice, said Octavia Reeve, the RCA’s senior publishing manager, who led the rebrand with the designers.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

“The typography is key to this,” she told Dezeen. ”It’s a great message that three generations of RCA graphic designers have collaborated on this essential new element of the RCA’s identity,” she added.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

The rest of the RCA’s rebrand, also designed by Research Studios, launches on 1st January 2013 to coincide with the 175th anniversary of the founding of the college.

Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert and Neville Brody

Dezeen previously published a movie with Neville Brody for the Design Museum’s Super Contemporary exhibition, in which he talks about the people, places and cultures that have defined his life in London.

Writer and broadcaster Andrew Marr recently warned that the Royal College of Art will end up as a “Chinese finishing school” unless the UK government does more to encourage young people to study art and design.

See all our stories about typography »
See all our stories about Neville Brody »
See all our stories about the Royal College of Art »

The post Calvert Brody typeface by Margaret Calvert,
Neville Brody and Henrik Kubel
appeared first on Dezeen.

Black Friday 30% off subscriptions

We’re fast approaching 700,000 followers on Twitter, and to say thanks for getting us there, we’re offering 30% off all magazine subscriptions taken out today, and over the weekend.

Over the past couple of years our followers have helped us identify the best logos and slogans of all time, given us invaluable feedback about our magazine and app, and shown us plenty of things that we never would have found out about if it wasn’t for Twitter.

As a thank you to all of you, and to celebrate our ever-growing international community, we’re getting into the spirit of Black Friday by offering a 30% discount off one-year, two-year and three-year magazine subscriptions today, wherever you’re based in the world. Head here to take advantage of the discount.

Of course, we don’t want our current subscribers to miss out either, so if you’re already a subscriber, you can also take advantage of the discount. Take out a subscription and it will automatically be added onto the end of your current subscription.

With your subscription you’ll get:

– The magazine delivered direct to your door each month
– Monograph, our exclusive monthly visual supplement, produced only for subscribers
– Access to an online archive of over five years’ worth of CR content
– The Annual and Photography Annual print showcases
– Priority invites to Creative Review events and training courses (coming soon)

You have until Monday, November 26 to take advantage of the offer, so step this way!

Magic carpets: CR December issue

Creative Review’s December issue includes a special feature on designer rugs. Plus: LiveSurface, popular lies about graphic design, advertising’s neglect of its history, and an interview with Tony Kaye like no other

 

Does it matter if design projects are presented using fake images created using LiveSurface and the like? Mark Sinclair looks in to the issue of mocking-up

 

We have an extract from Craig Ward’s upcoming book Popular Lies About Graphic Design, which takes on some of the truisms about the profession

 

Why has advertising been so poor at preserving its past and what is it doing about it? Anna Richardson Taylor has the answers

 

Traditional portfolio or iPad? Illustrators’ agents share their tips for getting seen with Gavin Lucas

 

Get Knotted: why carpets are the latest medium of choice for designers and illustrators

 

An interview via K-mail: maverick director Tony Kaye has a certain way with the old email

 

Kalle Lasn of Adbusters hopes his new economics text book, Meme Wars, will inspire students to challenge their lecturers. Guardian economics leader writer Aditya Chakrabortty, who reviews the book for us, has his doubts

 

Gordon Comstock pities brands’ long-suffering social media managers

 

In a new column on art direction, Paul Belford deconstructs a Levi’s ad that was so wrong it was very right, plus, in his brand identity column, Michael Evamy looks at the work of Barcelona-based Mario Eskenazi

 

And Daniel Benneworth-Gray tackles every freelancer’s dilemma – getting work

 

Our Monograph this month, for subscribers only, features the EnsaïmadART project in which Astrid Stavro and Pablo Martin invited designers from around the world to create stickers to go on the packaging of special edition packaging for Majorca’s distinctive pastry, the ensaïmada, with all profits going to a charity on the island (full story here)

 

CR’s back cover features one of Craig Ward’s Popular Lies About Graphic Design

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 to 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. Try a free sample issue here

EnsamaidART’s delicious designs

A worker at amadip.esment poses with Mike Dempsey’s ensaïmadART sticker design. Photo: Borja Zausen

To raise funds for a local charity, Majorca-based designers Astrid Stavro and Pablo Martín invited fellow designers from around the world to create stickers to adorn a special edition series of boxes containing the island’s national cake, the ensaïmada

 

Traditional ensaïmada boxes awaiting assembly

The Majorcan ensaïmada is a traditional pastry made from fermented dough, sweetened and baked to achieve a light, flaky consistency. In their distinctive octagonal boxes, ensaïmadas are a popular souvenir and a familiar sight in the departure lounge of the island’s airport.

 

EnsaimadART prototype designs featuring stickers from Klas Ernflo (above left) and Zak Kyes (above)

 

The EnsaimadART project aims to celebrate the 50th anniversary of amadip.esment, a non-profit organisation which works with people with intellectual disabilities on the island, providing training, support, jobs, activities and counselling. Each artist was asked to create a circular sticker, 270mm in diameter, to the brief of ‘can a sticker have a positive effect on society?’

Each artwork was printed by workers at amadip.esment in an edition of 50 and applied to boxed ensaïmadas from Majorcan bakers.

Printing the boxes and stickers at amadip.esment


This film documents the process. Art direction: Cumi Torán. Shot and edited by Borja Zausen, Nopasespena. Music by Ramón Martínez


The boxes are all stamped and numbered using specially-designed rubber stamps

 

The pastries will be sold at bakeries with all profits going to amadip.esment. In addition, Majorcan publishing house Infolio is to produce 1,000 copies of a commemorative catalogue (dummy shown) featuring the actual stickers ‘tipped’ onto the pages, with profits again going to amadip.esment.

 

 

Here’s a small selection of the artworks created for the project which launches on December 13 at the port of Majorca (full list of contributors here). 

Alex Trochut

 

Coralie Bickford-Smith

 

Fanette Mellier

 

Fred Birdsall

 

Hey Studio

 

Hvass&Hannibal

 

Javier Perada

 

Jordi Labanda

 

Laura Messeguer

 

Miriam Rosenbloom

 

Na Kim

 

Project Projects

 

Richard Sarson

 

Studio Makgill

 

Vince Frost

 

Wladimir Marnich

 

Wim Crouwel

 

The ensaïmadas and the catalogue can be purchased from amadip.esment’s website

The project is also the subject of our December Monograph publication, exclusive to CR subscribers.

 

Photo: Borja Zausen


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. Try a free sample issue here.

CR In print

In our November issue we look at ad agency Wieden + Kennedy in a major feature as it celebrates its 30th anniversary; examine the practice of and a new monograph on M/M (Paris); investigate GOV.UK, the first major project from the Government Digital Service; explore why Kraftwerk appeals so much to designers; and ponder the future of Instagram. Rick Poynor reviews the Phaidon Archive of Graphic Design; Jeremy Leslie takes in a new exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery dedicated to experimental magazine, Aspen; Mark Sinclair explores Birmingham’s Ikon Gallery show of work by the late graphic designer, Tony Arefin; while Daniel Benneworth-Gray writes about going freelance; and Michael Evamy looks at new telecommunications brand EE’s identity. Plus, subscribers also receive Monograph in which Tim Sumner of tohave-and-tohold.co.uk dips into Preston Polytechnic’s ephemera archive to pick out a selection of printed paper retail bags from the 70s and 80s.

The issue also doubles up as the Photography Annual 2012 – our showcase of the best images in commercial photography produced over the last year. The work selected is as strong as ever, with photographs by the likes of Tim Flach (whose image of a hairless chimp adorns the front cover of the issue, above); Nadav Kander (whose shot of actor Mark Rylance is our Photography Annual cover); Martin Usborne; Peter Lippmann; Giles Revell and more.

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 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subsc

Watergate Bay Hotel’s new look

Pearlfisher has created the new brand identity for the Watergate Bay Hotel in Cornwall, from signage and menus, through to the stationery and all communication materials…

Charged with creating a cohesive brand identity and to rationalise how its hierarchy should work and be communicated throughout the hotel and its various environments, Pearlfisher say that the new identity needed to connect people directly to the experience of the destination and its elements.

“The logotype has been drawn by hand,” says Sarah Butler, Pearlfisher’s deputy creative director. “This gives a personal touch to the logo that is core to the brand values: raw, energetic, elemental, imperfect and unique, and reflective of the North Cornish coastline.”

This hand drawn approach extends to a number of illustrations that appear on various materials, from menus and booklets to the do-not-disturb hangers and the hotel’s signage.

The idea is, explains Butler, that “the iconography brings out the warm character of the brand and its personable yet sophisticated personality. The illustrations are silhouettes of real life objects,” she continues. “They’re simple and realistic with a hand drawn outline to maintain the raw elemental style of the logotype.”

Pearlfisher also designed the identity, packaging and tone of voice for Another Place, the hotel’s exclusive range of handmade products including hand lotion, hand wash, shampoo, conditioner, body wash, salt scrub and massage oil.

pearlfisher.com.

 

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. Try a free sample issue here.

CR In print

In our November issue we look at ad agency Wieden + Kennedy in a major feature as it celebrates its 30th anniversary; examine the practice of and a new monograph on M/M (Paris); investigate GOV.UK, the first major project from the Government Digital Service; explore why Kraftwerk appeals so much to designers; and ponder the future of Instagram. Rick Poynor reviews the Phaidon Archive of Graphic Design; Jeremy Leslie takes in a new exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery dedicated to experimental magazine, Aspen; Mark Sinclair explores Birmingham’s Ikon Gallery show of work by the late graphic designer, Tony Arefin; while Daniel Benneworth-Gray writes about going freelance; and Michael Evamy looks at new telecommunications brand EE’s identity. Plus, subscribers also receive Monograph in which Tim Sumner of tohave-and-tohold.co.uk dips into Preston Polytechnic’s ephemera archive to pick out a selection of printed paper retail bags from the 70s and 80s.

The issue also doubles up as the Photography Annual 2012 – our showcase of the best images in commercial photography produced over the last year. The work selected is as strong as ever, with photographs by the likes of Tim Flach (whose image of a hairless chimp adorns the front cover of the issue, above); Nadav Kander (whose shot of actor Mark Rylance is our Photography Annual cover); Martin Usborne; Peter Lippmann; Giles Revell and more.

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 to 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.

 

Putting Metz on the Map

The 2010 launch of the Centre Pompidou-Metz modern art museum brought almost half a million new visitors a year to the northern French town. This month, the second stage of an innovative trilingual wayfaring system to guide those visitors around the city was launched

Metz sees itself as a town at the ‘crossroads of Europe’. To entice visitors drawn to the Pompidou’s northeastern outpost to discover the town and its monuments, Mayor Dominique Gros commissioned a signage system from the Franco-Swiss agency, Intégral Ruedi Baur. Its second and definitive phase was unveiled on November 12.

 

 

Visually, this was a highly sensitive project, as Metz’s historic town centre is protected by both UNESCO and the Architectes des Batîments de France (the French organisation responsible for vetting work on historic buildings). Each creative proposition had to be justified and evaluated before being accepted. The citizens of Metz – or ‘Messins’ – also had their say. “I find this normal,” says Paris-based designer Ruedi Baur, “This ensures the system will be kept alive for years to come.”

 

Baur rejected a traditional sign system, as, he believed, this would have destroyed the visual harmony of three centuries of architecture in the town. Instead, with the objective of ‘opening the town up to the world’ he developed an ‘ethereal, poetic’ concept; ‘écrire la ville’ (spelling out the town).

 

Drawing on Metz’s heritage in the steel industry, Baur designed a sign system in aluminium cut by water jet. This technique produces large format signs in a single piece without any soldering marks. White letters are positioned between two horizontal bars, recalling musical notation. The resulting filigree effect is designd to be read against a background of sky or stone.

 

Baur chose Irma for the type for its consistent height so that the characters sit easily between the horizontal bars. Only the sides of the letters are coloured. The colour code is subtle, becoming more vivid, even fluorescent, the closer they’re placed to the town centre. Each colour was individually selected in situ in the prototype phase, to make sure each sign harmonises with its surroundings. QR and NFC codes are integrated invisibly in the city centre’s signs so that visitors can access up-to-the-minute information on what’s on in Metz in real time by scanning these with their smart phones.

 

The most technically challenging part of the project, according to Baur, will be launched in January – a system of street signs with mobile letters suspended between buildings on cables in the historic Coeur de Ville (mock-up shown above). “I was inspired by jewellery,” says Baur of his approach. “By the way a pendant adapts itself to the wearer’s body.”

Also to come in January will be a series of awnings for the town’s covered market (see above).

At just 90 minutes from Paris by TGV, either to visit the Centre Pompidou-Metz or to explore the city with Baur’s sign system, Metz ‘vaut le detour’ (it’s worth the trip).

Creative team: Ruedi Baur, Stephanie Brabant, Eva Kubinyi, Claudia Leuchs, David Thomazeau, Thibault Fourrier.

 

 

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. Try a free sample issue here.

CR In print

In our November issue we look at ad agency Wieden + Kennedy in a major feature as it celebrates its 30th anniversary; examine the practice of and a new monograph on M/M (Paris); investigate GOV.UK, the first major project from the Government Digital Service; explore why Kraftwerk appeals so much to designers; and ponder the future of Instagram. Rick Poynor reviews the Phaidon Archive of Graphic Design; Jeremy Leslie takes in a new exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery dedicated to experimental magazine, Aspen; Mark Sinclair explores Birmingham’s Ikon Gallery show of work by the late graphic designer, Tony Arefin; while Daniel Benneworth-Gray writes about going freelance; and Michael Evamy looks at new telecommunications brand EE’s identity. Plus, subscribers also receive Monograph in which Tim Sumner of tohave-and-tohold.co.uk dips into Preston Polytechnic’s ephemera archive to pick out a selection of printed paper retail bags from the 70s and 80s.

The issue also doubles up as the Photography Annual 2012 – our showcase of the best images in commercial photography produced over the last year. The work selected is as strong as ever, with photographs by the likes of Tim Flach (whose image of a hairless chimp adorns the front cover of the issue, above); Nadav Kander (whose shot of actor Mark Rylance is our Photography Annual cover); Martin Usborne; Peter Lippmann; Giles Revell and more.

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 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subsc