Are you Hank Marvin?

If not, you could be. We have a signed Fender Squier electric guitar to give away to one of our readers, and are also offering the chance for you to see your work published by CR, in return for a poster of your dream gig.

Thanks to Saatchi & Saatchi ad agency in London we have a Fender Squier electric guitar – signed by Hank Marvin no less – to give away to one of our readers. The guitar is similar to the ones seen in the recent Mattessons Fridge Raiders ad by Saatchis, which is shown above. If you’d like to be in with a chance of winning the guitar, and seeing some of your work published by CR, we’d like to see a poster for your dream gig.

We’re not imposing any rules on the type of musicians you include on the poster, or on the style of poster you design or illustrate for us. The only restriction is that our entrants need to be able to come and collect their winnings. Unfortunately the guitar doesn’t include a case, and due to its fragile nature and our limited resources, we are unable to post it. The winner will therefore need to be able to come and collect it from our central London office. We promise to take good care of it in the meantime.

The winning poster and a selection of runners up will be published by CR, either on the website or the magazine, in the coming weeks.

The deadline to submit your posters is by 6pm, on Tuesday 31st July. Please email all entries here.

Staycations album packaging

As albums go, Staycation by London-based band Kotki Dwa is a bit unusual: It comes in a clothbound cover with a set of 11 postcards and it was produced in creative partnership with the National Trust rather than with a record label…

The three-piece band, fronted by Alex Ostrowski, a design partner at YCN, explains: “Our idea was for the National Trust to support us in releasing our music independently, in exchange for creatively celebrating their various properties, using some of them to record in and to inspire the album’s artwork.”

The band travelled around the country, visiting various NT properties to record in from Sutton House in Hackney to Borrowdale in the Lake District. They even made use of some of the instruments at Fenton House, home to Europoe’s larges collection of keyboard instruments.


Photographs of the band in various NT locations during the recording of the album

The album, art directed by Ostrowski, comes with a striped paper bag containing 11 postcards, one for each track on the album. Lyrics are printed on one side of each with a beautiful landscape photograph (presented in portrait format) by Alex Edouard taken on the Gower Peninsula.

All the text used throughout the package is set in Holiday Sans, a bespoke typeface designed specially for the album by Jon Lister at YCN.

Only 50 copies of the album have been made and are available via the band’s bandcamp site here, although a few have been placed in the NT shops of a handful of the properties recorded in.

The band has also curated a special exhition in collaboration with YCN artists to further explore the theme of the Staycations album. Contributors include Sam Brewster, Jamie Brown, Daniel Frost, Jean Jullien, Maggie Li, Hattie Newman, Charlotte Trounce and Dan Woodger. The show runs until July 27 at the YCN Shop & Library on 72 Rivington Street. For more info, visit talent.ycnonline.com.

kotkidwa.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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

Reeve’s new identity

London-based agency Felt Branding has created the branding for Reeve, a company that works mainly with architects and interior designers to create bespoke wooden features from flooring and worktops to furniture and mouldings…

The Reeve logo is recognisable as both a letter “r” and a graphic representation of a tree, and Felt worked closely with Generation Press to further reference wood and bring an understated tactile element to all printed materials. The business cards (above), for example, are printed on a 300gsm paper stock that carries a wood grain emboss on the reverse.

Generation Press also printed up Reeve sample books, opting to print on 100% recycled Cyclus Offset stock.

Felt worked with copywriter Jim Davies of Total Content to create Reeve’s tone of voice which has been applied consistently (in sans serif type) through the brochure and also across the company’s website which was developed by Mesh London.

“Reeve’s website has had a complete overhaul, simplifying the product offer, and the sample ordering process, as well as allowing architects and designers the ability to create an account to manage their ongoing projects,” explains Felt’s Tom Rogers. “We also developed a case study section, to showcase some of the impressive jobs Reeve has been involved with.”

feltbranding.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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

Atipo Breathes New Life into A.M. Cassandre Posters

It may be impossible to improve upon an A.M. Cassandre poster, but Spanish design studio Atipo has outdone itself with this tribute to his famous “Dubo, Dubon, Dubonnet” triptych (above). Once you’re savored the last drop of loving homage, treat yourself to Cassannet, Atipo’s Art Deco-flavored font based on the lettering in Cassandre posters.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

D&AD announces all-time top award winners

Above, clockwise from top left, D&AD-winning work from John Webster (Smash), Marcello Minale (Heal’s), Wieden + Kennedy (Honda), Mark Farrow (Pet Shop Boys)

As part of its upcoming 50th anniversary celebrations, D&AD has identified the designers, studios, ad agencies, creatives, directors and brands who have won the most pencils in its history

On 18 September 2012, D&AD celebrates its 50th Birthday. The organisation is staging a party and awards ceremony, at which the top ranked agencies, studios and people of the last 50 years of D&AD will be recognised with a one-off award.

Ahead of the event, D&AD has worked out the top ten most awarded people and companies in each of the following categories: Ad Agency, Design Studio, Production Company, Brand, Art Director, Copywriter, Designer and Director.

Here they are in alphabetical order:

The Economist ad by AMV.BBDO

 

Advertising agency:

AMV.BBDO
Bartle Bogle Hegarty London
Collett Dickenson Pearce
DDB London (including BMP pre 1989 merger)
DDB London (pre 1989 merger)
DLKW Lowe
Saatchi & Saatchi London
TBWA\London
Wieden + Kennedy Portland
Wieden + Kennedy UK

 

Winsor & Newton packaging by Michael Peters & Partners

 

Design Studio

Apple
Carroll Dempsey & Thirkell (including Carroll & Dempsey)
Casson Mann
Crosby/Fletcher/Forbes (including Fletcher/Forbes/Gill)
Farrow
Michael Peters & Partners
Minale Tattersfield & Partners
Pentagram Design
Studio Dumbar
The Partners

Production Company

Academy
Alan Parker Film Company
Gorgeous Enterprises
MJZ
Park Village Productions
Partizan
Paul Weiland Film Company
Ridley Scott Associates
The Mill
Tony Kaye Films

 

London Weekend Television ad by Axel Chaldecott

Art Director

Axel Chaldecott
Bob Isherwood
Craig Allen
David Horry
John Gorse
John Hegarty
John Webster
Neil Godfrey
Tony McTear
Walter Campbell

 

Sunday Times Magazine cover by Gilvrie Misstear

 

Designer

Brian Tattersfield
David Hillman
David King
Gilvrie Misstear
John McConnell
Marcello Minale
Michael Johnson
Michel De Boer
Mike Dempsey
Tony Meeuwissen

Director

Alan Parker
Chris Cunningham
Chris Palmer
Frank Budgen
Hugh Hudson
Jonathan Glazer
Michel Gondry
Roger Woodburn
Tom Kuntz
Tony Kaye

 

Birds Eye ad by Tony Brignull

 

Copywriter

David Abbott
Eric Kallman
John Salmon
John Webster
Mike Cozens
Nick Gill
Nick Worthington
Steve Henry
Tom Carty
Tony Brignull

Brands

Apple
BBC Television
Benson & Hedges
Channel 4
Guinness
Honda
Levi Strauss
Nike

 

Looking down the lists, the first thing that strikes is that, in the individual lists, there is just one woman (the Sunday Times magazine’s Gilvrie Misstear) – a reflection on the industries themselves more than D&AD but we can only hope that if D&AD conducts a similar exercise in 50 years’ time the balance will have been redressed. It’s also a very British list – again, this would probably look very different in 50 years as D&AD has become far more international in scope in recent times.

Elsewhere it’s a mix of the usual suspects with a few names who will be unfamiliar to younger readers. The ad agency list is confused by all the mergers and reorganisations that have taken place over the last 50 years while the design studios tend toward the heavy-hitters of the 80s. Both can be skewed by the dominance of one or two multi-award-winning pieces of work.

And of course we have to recognise that this is not just a list of those who have won, but also of those who have entered. While the ad lists are a pretty fair reflection of the great and the good of the UK advertising industry, there are a lot of great names missing on the design side – either because they failed to find favour with the judges or because they never entered D&AD in the first place.

But nevertheless, it is an intriguing snapshot of the creative industries since 1962 even though it more accurately mirrors the history of D&AD than the history of the creative industries in the wider sense. Furthermore, the list of the most-awarded brands will provide ammunition to agencies and designers attempting to persuade clients of the worth of what they do. Save for Benson & Hedges, it’s a list of some of the most successful brands in the world.

 

During its 50th year, D&AD has also launched a new award, the White Pencil, for “a creative idea with the potential to effect real and positive change in the world”. Each time the competition runs, D&AD “will set a brief challenging the creative community to solve a communications problem for a non-profit organisation or established cause. The winning idea will demonstrate the capacity to raise awareness and change behaviour around that cause.”

For its first year, the White Pencil brief  is to “grow awareness of and engagement with Peace Day, establishing September 21 as a global, self-sustaining, annual day of peace, when everyone can take action to end conflict in their own lives and in the lives of others.” The deadline is October 24. Full details are here.

Entering agencies and design studios are being encouraged to post a White Pencil Kitemark on their website to show their support and encourage others to enter.

The D&AD/50 Birthday Dinner is on September 18, 2012 at Battersea Evolution, Chelsea Bridge Entrance, Battersea Park, London, SW11 4NJ. For infomration and tickets email celebrate@dandad.org or call 0800 054 6266

 

 

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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

GraphicDesign& Everything

Publishers GraphicDesign& have ambitious plans this weekend: they aim to start an online archive of objects that illustrate graphic design’s connection to, well, everything else. And they need your help to contribute examples…

According to GD& this Saturday (July 21) will see “the launch of our quest to prove that graphic design is connected with all other subjects”.

Over a one-day event at London’s Design Museum and via the web, GD&’s Lucienne Roberts and Rebecca Wright are seeking contributions to a graphic design archive where examples will be catalogued using the various top-level subject categories from the Bliss Bibliographic Classification system (categories are below.)

“We’re interested in everyday occurrences of graphic design in context,” write GD& on their website, “professional and vernacular, familiar and unfamiliar, old and new, weird and wonderful – and the subject/s to which they connect.” Pack shots and examples of designer self-promotion are a no-no.

Collectors can submit their finds between 10am and 5pm BST on July 21, either via Twitter (see details below) or in person at GD&’s pop-up lab at the Design Museum.

To kick things off GD& have posted a few examples of their own on their site including Milton Glaser’s ‘I Love NY’ design for New York State (categorised as ‘geography’, ‘psychology’ and ‘sociology’, among others) and a hinged hazard warning sign from the back of an American truck (which is classified as ‘chemistry’, ‘law’ and ‘technology’).

Here’s a more detailed explanation of what you need to do in order to take part.

1. Check the calendar. Is it Saturday July 21, between 10am and 5pm BST?
2. Choose any example of graphic design
3. Photograph it (preferably portrait format)
4. Categorise it, using the list of subject categories below
5. Tweet your photograph to @gdand_ using the hashtag #Everything. (If your example fits into more than one category then Tweet it more than once)
6. If there’s room add any additional information you wish
7. Check out the dedicated ‘& Everything‘ webpage as examples are uploaded to the GraphicDesign& Everything archive on the day

If you wish to attend the one-day event, simply bring your object along on Saturday to the Design Museum, 28 Shad Thames, London SE1 2YD. The GD& team will help categorise, photograph and upload your example to the archive. There will also be large scale projections of the archive as it grows in size over the course of the day.

The subject category list in full is:

Generalia, Phenomena, Knowledge
Philosophy
Mathematics
Physics
Chemistry
Astronomy, Earth Science
Biological Sciences
Microbiology
Botany
Zoology
Human Sciences, Medicine, Physical Anthropology
Psychology
Education
Sociology
History
Religion
Social Welfare
Politics
Law
Economics
Technology
Arts, Music, Literature
Documentation, Bibliography, Information Science

Full details of the project at graphicdesignand.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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

Shrewsbury’s new brand campaign

Tired of being overshadowed by the better-known neighbouring towns of Hay-on-Wye and Ludlow, Shrewsbury in Shropshire is hoping a new £25,000 brand identity and campaign will help put it more clearly on the tourism map…

The identity and brand campaign, created by two London agencies, & Smith and We All Need Words, was commissioned by Shropshire Council on behalf of Destination Shrewsbury, with the main aim of promoting Shrewsbury as a prime location to live, work, visit and invest in.

Graphically, the Shrewsbury branding is based on a large original black and white pattern which nods towards the many wood-beamed Tudor buildings in the town. The pattern has been applied to business cards and some of the graphic elements appear in a specially adapted version of Dalton Maag typeface Efra which acts as the official brand typeface for headlines.

An advertising campaign shows off the adapted typeface pairing up words such as “graffiti” or “chain store” with photographs of Shrewsbury’s take on it.

The idea from the offset was to create something that local businesses could use and employ to help market themselves. So the two collaborating agencies created the line “A Shrewsbury One-Off Since…” strap line and graphic stamp device that could be used in maps, brochures and advertising. The idea is that the device can be used to show how old (or how fresh) something is – from a building that’s as old as 1586 to a cake that was baked at 6.30am.

“We wanted to come up with a shorthand for Shrewsbury,” explains Rob Mitchell of We All Need Words. “If Hay-on-Wye is books, what is Shrewsbury? The more time we spent there, the more we realised that Shrewsbury has lots of things to talk about. We had to come up with a way to sum that up that was memorable and could be used in lots of ways by different people.”

Local businesses will also have their own stamps and stickers to bring the campaign to life further in their own shops:

Although not implemented just yet, the branding will be applied to the visitshrewsbury.com website too:

visitshrewsbury.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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

Visualizing Change: An Interview with The Noun Project

StrangeIcons.jpeg

The mission of The Noun Project is to collect, organize and add to the highly recognizable symbols that form the world’s visual language so they can be shared in a fun and meaningful way. The symbols are free, simple, and high quality—not to mention truly delightful.

In this conversation with the Designers Accord, we learn from The Noun Project founders, Edward Boatman and Sofya Polyakov, how a shared visual language can be the connective tissue across disciplines and geographies, and why you don’t need to be a designer to be an effective communicator and change-maker.

* * *

Designers Accord: The Noun Project strikes a perfect balance between function and folly—providing amazing quality scalable icons for everything from the universal human icon to a sasquatch. Share the background of how your initiative came about—what was the initial inspiration and who’s involved?

Edward Boatman: The Noun Project is one of those ideas that slowly grew and evolved over time. I think the starting point was my sketchbook. One summer I started to draw the things that used to fascinate me when I was a child: Sequoias, Trains, Cranes, Combines and a lot of other “nouns.” After doing this for some time and creating a nice stack of sketches, I thought to myself it would be great if I had a drawing that depicted every single concept or object in existence.

Then a couple years down the road I was working at an architecture firm putting together a lot of presentation boards and I was frustrated that I couldn’t quickly find icons for very common things such as airplanes, bicycles and people. I thought about taking my old noun concept and tweaking it a bit to solve this real world problem I was experiencing.

I started talking to my really good friend Scott Thomas and my wife Sofya Polyakov about building on the original idea. We decided the biggest impact could be made by building a platform for visual communication. Symbols serve as some of the best tools to overcome many language, cultural, and even medical communication barriers. Having designers from around the world engage in creating a visual language doesn’t just create symbols for what already exists, it also creates symbols for what we want to see in the world—things like Community Gardens, Sustainable Energy and Human Rights.

Sketchbook.jpg

Sofya Polyakov: We launched the site on Kickstarter in December 2010 using mostly symbols that already existed in the public domain, like the AIGA transportation suite and the National Park Service symbols. The response was incredible—we received tremendous support not only from the design community, but also from the autism & special education communities, teachers who wanted symbols to help kids read, librarians, app developers, etc. We were written up in TechCrunch, The Atlantic, Fast Company, PSFK, Engadget, as well as a lot of international blogs. Half of our traffic still comes from outside of the United States, which is something we really value because it’s fascinating to see how people from around the world “see” the same concept. For example, what does a symbol for “Protest” look like around the world? You can now go to The Noun Project and find the answer.

Protest.jpg

DA: You’ve already built amazing momentum—from sketchbook to meme. What does your team look like and how do you carry this forward?

EB: As the CEO, Sofya is the brains behind the operations side of running the business and also handles all of our marketing and community outreach. Scott and his team at Simple.Honest.Work have done an amazing job managing the design, development and UX of the site. I look after the growing collection of symbols to make sure we adhere to high design and user comprehension standards, and I also work with the international community of designers who are creating them.

SP: We also recently got accepted into the Designer Fund, so we’ve been very fortunate to have incredible mentors and advisors from Twitter, Groupon, Pinterest, Stanford’s d.School, Google, 37Signals, and others. Besides being some of the most talented designers today, our mentors are also incredible people. I honestly can’t think of too many industries where someone so successful, whose time is so valuable, just volunteers their time to help out a start-up. It’s amazing to have so many talented people around you who want you to succeed.

(more…)


be.brussels identity

Base Design has revealed its new identity system for the Brussels Capital Region in Belgium. The work is based on a new ‘.brussels’ domain address for the area, and turns the standard country code into a statement…

While the new ‘.brussels’ domain suffix will come into use in the region in 2013, reflecting the importance of maintaining a strong regional identity online, the new system retains an aspect of the area’s traditional identity: the blue and yellow iris, the symbol for the Brussels Capital Region.

The new brand is, say Base, composed of a “call to action” i.e. ‘be.brussels’ and apparently also ties the capital to the Brussels Region to Belgium, which can be abbreviated to ‘BE’ (though as capital city, the links between Brussels and the wider country were probably quite strong already).

The following work for the campaign shows how the identity makes use of the ‘be’ as a flexible element that sits alongside the ‘be.brussels’ phrase. Hence ‘be inspired’, ‘be espanol’, ‘be english’, ‘be turk’ and so on. Even ‘be chouchou’ or ‘be babaluba’.

There are some nice touches where the word is replaced by a symbol e.g. a pipe, the iris, the Belgian flag, a brussels sprout.

Despite having to accomodate an existing part of the capital’s identity (the iris), Base has succeeded in playing on the established colours of blue and yellow and sitting a relevant, contemporary identity system around it, which asserts the importance of the region’s online presence with quirky humour.

 

 

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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.

London 2012: the look of the Games

As final preparations for the London Olympics continue, the LOCOG design team gives CR an exclusive tour of the Olympic Park and the installation of the thousands of graphic elements making up the look of the Games

 

As you enter the Olympic Park from the Westfield shopping centre, following the route that 75% of visitors will take once the Games begin, the first thing that greets you (after the Commandos and their metal detectors) is the Stratford Gate. This huge magenta angular construction (by Surface Architects) is unmistakably part of London 2012. Its form comes directly from the graphic language derived from the 2012 logo, its lettering combines Gareth Hague’s 2012 font with TFL’s Johnston typeface.

 

But if you have arrived here on the tube, if you have spent any time in a London borough, seen the Torch Relay or even if you have come direct from the airport, you will already have been thoroughly exposed to the ‘look’ of the 2012 Olympics. LOCOG claims to have taken the development of a consistent, comprehensive graphic language for the Games further than any previous Olympiad with ‘One Look’ applied from the airport all the way to the venue.

Just how this ‘One Look’ was developed from the original 2012 brand created by Wolff Olins will be explored in detail in the August issue of CR (our Olympics special, out July 25) where we have an exclusive interview with LOCOG director of marketing, brand and culture Greg Nugent.

 

 

The project was led by Futurebrand (with global ECD Shane Greeves and creative director Matt Buckhurst) which developed a comprehensive visual language out of the Wolff Olins work to a stage where the LOCOG design team could (again working with a 20-strong team at Futurebrand) apply it to dressing the Games. That dressing includes everything from street banners, to the Tube, to the Torch Relay to the Olympic venues themselves. When Wolff Olins revealed the 2012 logo in 2007, we were promised that the brand would really come alive once we saw it applied across all the Olympic elements. Finally, that vision is coming into being and the real potential of what has remained a highly controversial identity is being fully exploited.

All over London, banners proclaiming the upcoming Games have been going up, conforming to the standards set out in the London 2012 Look Book.

 


Olympic banners on Goodge Street, London W1

 

Tube travellers will also have noticed the Olympic signage going up in stations around the network. But it is in the Olympic Park that things really come together.

The Tube signage is all in magenta (one of the few colours not already used by the network) and the New Johnston TFL typeface. That is repeated on the Park itself. Wayfinding is led by Surface’s giant beacons whose architecture, like the Stratford Gate, takes its cues from the shard-like visual language derived from the logo.

 

The hierarchy of the beacons starts with major venues (typically the stadium) at the top as an aid to orientation, followed by smaller venues, entrances and exits and finally, nearest the ground, estimated walking times to points within the Park. Their gigantic size is mean to aid traffic flows as people will not need to gather too close around them to read the directions. LED displays top each structure.

 

Additional signage also takes its physical form from the shards generated from the logo.

 

The angular magenta wayfaring signs are carried through into the venues. This is from the athletes’ area of the Aquatic Centre (note the directions to the Synchronised Swimming ‘vanity area’ – a line of make-up mirrors and hairdryers ready for those last-minute touch-ups before going poolside).

Each venue has its own specific colour: as you near, say, the Aquatic Centre, the banners lining the paths change to the colours of that venue (blue and yellow in the case of water sports) leading you to where you need to go. These colour schemes are also carried through to the tickets (more on the tickets here).

 

Those specific colour schemes are then used to ‘dress’ the venues inside and out. Here, graphics panels for the Water Polo venue are being readied for installation.

 

Within the venues, the ‘prime asset’ of the Olympic Rings takes pride of place, while the London 2012 word mark is used in preference to the main logo. Below, graphics are being applied to the velodrome. In a first for 2012, the LOCOG team worked closely with photographers and broadcasters to ensure that not only would the venue graphics not interfere with their shots, but also that as many shots as possible would be able to feature 2012 branding. As a result of talking to photographers and TV directors, the LOCOG team have gone to extraordinary lengths to brand each shot, placing logos on, for example, water polo goal posts, the end of poles on show jumping fences and the top of the struts holding the pole vaulting bar.

 

Many of the Olympic venues are temporary, allowing the look of the games to be incorporated into their architecture. Here, for example, the temporary yellow and white seats in the Aquatic Centre use the shard pattern (as do the seats in the main stadium and the hockey arena).

The Olympic hockey stadium as shot by aerial photographer Jason Hawkes. For more on Hawkes’ work, see our post here

The hockey stadium’s distinctive blue field was the result of a request from the International Hockey Federation to LOCOG to help them raise interest in the sport. The LOCOG team developed the new colour scheme after extensive testing with players and broadcasters.

Even the floodlights of the main stadium were designed in response to the Games’ angular look, as was the wrap around the outside of the stadium which doubles as a wayfaring device (seat block numbers are printed at the bottom of the white strips).

 

Within the stadium, the look has even been applied to the numbering of the lanes on the running track which use the 2012 font.

 

In a nice touch, each venue also has what Nugent calls its “Anfield moment” – an image from London 1948 of a sign featuring Baron de Coubertin’s famous quote on the Olympian spirit which all athletes must pass on their way out to the playing area. This one is from the water polo venue.

The LOCOG team of 40 designers (Beijing apparently had around 800), led by head of look and feel Richard Hill and brand manager Maria Ramos, have had to produce some 250,000 items of design for the Games and the Paralympic Games (after the Olympics are over, the team has to redress all the venues with the Paralympic branding).

Even non-sporting venues have received the full ‘One Look’ treatment. Here’s the interior of the press centre.

Illuminated pictograms are used in this section for press releases on each sport.

 

And here the main press conference room.

 

The scale of the project on the Olympic Park alone is extraordinary as is the level to which the Futurebrand and LOCOG teams have gone to ensure a consistent, coherent visual experience. The logo will still have its detractors, but the way the look has been created and applied, across the Olympic Park, London and all over the UK, with the cooperation of local authorities, the GLA, TFL, sponsors etc is unprecedented. We were promised a brand and not just a logo, a comprehensive visual experience to an extent not seen in previous Games. Futurebrand and LOCOG have delivered just that.

 

The August issue of CR, our Olympics special, features an in-depth piece on the development of the look of the 2012 Games and an interview with LOCOG director of marketing, brand and culture Greg Nugent. Out July 25

Update: The team at LOCOG would like to pay tribute to Rik Zygmunt who was a member of the FutureBrand design team who developed the Look of London 2012. Rik tragically passed away on the 7th July, our thoughts are with his family and friends.

 

 

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
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

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.