Summer in the City by Michael Robinson at Dezeen Super Store

Summer in the City by Michael Robinson

British designer Michael Robinson‘s topical posters celebrating this summer in London are available from Dezeen Super Store at 38 Monmouth Street, London WC2. Come down to our launch party tonight from 6-9pm and remember you can print off this flyer to get 10% off at the store!

Summer in the City by Michael Robinson

The A3 Risograph-printed posters depict the rather grim weather we’re having here in the run-up to the Olympic games and cost just £10. On a similar note, check out Ella Doran umbrellas we featured earlier, also available at Dezeen Super Store.

Summer in the City by Michael Robinson

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

Monday to Saturday: 11am to 7pm
Sunday: 11am to 5pm
Party: Thursday 12 July, 6-9pm

The post Summer in the City by Michael Robinson
at Dezeen Super Store
appeared first on Dezeen.

4D typography by Lo Siento

Barcelona graphic design company Lo Siento has created a set of sculptural letters that can be read from all sides (+ movie).

4D by LoSiento

The studio had been working on several projects relating to architecture when they decided to try out “four-dimensional” typography.

4D by LoSiento

The designers constructed the letters from pieces of white card.

4D by LoSiento

When the letters are strung up, the reader can walk around and through words and read them from any direction.

4D by LoSiento

The movie is by Marcel Batlle and Lander Larrañaga.

4D by LoSiento

Photographs are by Lo Siento.

4D by LoSiento

See all our stories about fonts »

Here’s more text from the designers:


4D Typography is the result of the intersection in an orthogonal way in space of two extrusions of the same character, which allows the spectator to read it from two different positions in space at least.

4D by LoSiento

An observer searching to enjoy a particular architecture is forced to move around and through it. The change in perspective generates new spaces in which light acts in different ways. In this case, it is the typography that makes the effort of abandoning its two dimensions to approach the architectural sense. It does not resign with a third dimension; a fourth one is necessary to complete the reading possibilities. By hanging the typography, the reader is allowed to surround the characters in order to understand all their shapes.

4D by LoSiento

This idea started after Lo Siento carried out several identity projects regarding architecture. This was when the study decided to investigate and develop several volumetric languages starting from basic graphical concepts. One of these languages was 4D typography. It became a personal project from the studio and we decided to develop the whole alphabet. The creation of this alphabet and mistakes that were made during the creation process lead to new ideas for future projects.

Project name/title: 4D paper lettering
Year of work produced: 2011
Work type: Typography / Alphabet
Client: Losiento / self-initiated project
Art direction/Design: Gerard Miró / Lo Siento
Photography: Lo Siento
Work description: Four dimensional alphabet lettering made with paper. Each piece can be read from all 4 sides.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Dutch graphic designer Wim Crouwel has created two new typefaces for London type company The Foundry, based on his work for exhibition catalogues and posters from the 1960s and 1970s.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Architype Ingenieur (above and top) is a grid-based font that comes in four weights, including a dot matrix.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Architype Vierkant (above and below) is related to his controversial New Alphabet of 1967, which only used vertical and horizontal strokes in response to early digital display screens.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Dezeen interviewed Crouwel about his career to coincide with a retrospective of his work at the Design Museum last year. Watch the movie here or below and read more about his work in our earlier story.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Here’s some more information from The Foundry:


Foundry Types launches two new Crouwel typefaces

Building on its longstanding collaboration with Wim Crouwel, The Foundry – the London based independent type foundry set up by Freda Sack and David Quay – has launched two new typefaces by the Dutch design legend.

Architype Ingenieur is a four weight family inspired by Crouwel’s late 1950s exhibition catalogues and posters. Available in light, bold, regular and dot, the typeface was inspired by the simplified geometric letterforms Crouwel created for various exhibition catalogues and posters during the late 1950s.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Influenced by his boyhood fascination with naval lettering, Crouwel designed grid-based type with 45-degree angles for the Olanda poster for the Dutch entry to the 1960 Venice Biennale. A subtle variation on this appeared in the 1960 Stedelijk Museum catalogue for painter Jean Brusselmans; and several dot matrix versions followed.

Architype Vierkant has been developed from the letterforms that Crouwel created on the theme ‘typo vision international’ for a 1972 Drupa catalogue. This references many of the experimental ideas which underpin his controversial New Alphabet and Fodor typefaces. This single weight typeface forms part of the Architype Crouwel Collection.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

Both typefaces are part of Foundry Types’ newly expanded Architype Collections. The other collections in the series – Architype Konstrukt and Architype Universal – feature typefaces created from the experimental typographic work of artists and designers including Josef Albers, Jan Tschichold, Herbert Bayer, Kurt Schwitters and Theo Ballmer.

All fonts are available to licence direct from the new website www.foundrytypes.co.uk which now offers Opentype versions of all of the Foundry’s typefaces. Designers are invited to submit examples of their work which use the Foundry’s typefaces for inclusion on its new blog.

Typefaces by Wim Crouwel for The Foundry

About The Foundry

Set up in London in 1989 by David Quay and Freda Sack, The Foundry is the trademark of the highly respected typeface library, which is managed and run by Foundry Types Limited. Some of its best-selling releases include Foundry Sans, Foundry Wilson, Foundry Monoline and Foundry Gridnik.

Both of The Foundry’s partners continue to develop new typeface designs to expand the font collection. They bring a combination of traditional and modern approaches to font design and implementation, having worked in every technological stage of type design since hot metal, particularly being involved with the beginnings of digital font technology. Their pre-digital experience and skills lend integrity and quality to their type design.

Movie: Wim Crouwel
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British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

Creative agency Bear London have created a new logo for sporting body British Gymnastics that’s designed to captures the movement of somersaulting gymnasts.

Bear London collaborated with photographer Giles Revell and CGI artist Ben Koppel to create the new identity and moving graphics.

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

Motion-capture technology was used to plot the movements of gymnasts as they performed flips, tumbles and somersaults.

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

The data was then transformed into an animation of colourful ribbons that leap across the screen.

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

Typographer Rob Clarke created the logo. The connecting t and i in both words is intended to look like a gymnast’s finishing pose.

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

The new brand identity was launched at the British Championships in Liverpool last weekend, where Olympic hopefuls were hoping to impress judges ahead of the Team GB selection.

British Gymnastics logo by Bear London

See more stories about graphics »

Here’s more about the project from Bear London and British Gymnastics:


“Celebrating human movement is imperative to British Gymnastics. We felt passionately that our new identity should convey movement and freedom of expression. BG should look fresh and dynamic. To achieve this, we collaborated with photographer Giles Revell and CGI artist Ben Koppel to create our own set of unique images. Each image is ‘motion captured’ from real gymnastic movements including twists, somersaults, flips and tumbles”. Eddy Edwards, Bear London

British Gymnastics – London legacy drives new brand

Arriving in time for the London 2012 Olympic Games and ensuring the sport of gymnastics is appropriately ‘dressed for the party’, British Gymnastics (BG) will launch its new brand at this weekend’s Men’s and Women’s Artistic British Championships, heralding a new era for gymnastics in the United Kingdom.

Following a revision of strategic priorities in early 2011, British Gymnastics has prepared a fresh and exciting new brand that takes its inspiration from the movement of the gymnast. Designed by London based creative design agency, Bear, the new brand includes a new logotype and supporting motion graphics.

The unique logo incorporates subtle hints of the beauty and precision of the sport supported by a series of original motion graphics that have been created from an actual gymnast’s movement.

British Gymnastics CEO Jane Allen is excited about the sport’s new look and its future potential, “A lot has been said about the legacy of the Olympic Games. British Gymnastics has been driving a marketing and communications strategy for over 18 months to ensure our membership is ready to take advantage of the promotion our sport will receive throughout the UK. BG’s new brand is a major component of that strategy and will reach out and excite existing members whilst inspiring a new generation of participants and fans.”

The new brand will be officially launched this weekend at the Echo Arena in Liverpool, where the nation’s artistic gymnastics Olympic hopefuls will be out to impress selectors ahead of the Olympic team announcement on July 4th.

HexGrid

Domus 2012


The entrance of Domus academy where I’m currently teaching a seminar called “Un designer per le Imprese”.

Designed in Hackney: TN29 by Le Gun and Tracey Neuls

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

Designed in Hackney: illustration collective Le Gun have collaborated with footwear designer Tracey Neuls to create a range of shoes inspired by items discovered inside a suitcase in a Hackney basement.

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

Le Gun created a drawing based on the objects and the life of their imagined owner, and each shoe in the limited edition is covered by a different part of the image.

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

The interior of Tracey Neuls’ Shoreditch shop is decorated with Le Gun’s illustrations and their work is exhibited alongside the shoes.

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

The shop opened at the end of last year on Redchurch Street, beyond the Hackney border. Le Gun have their studio by London Fields and Neuls lives in Hackney too.

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

See all our stories about Tracey Neuls »

Here’s some more information from LE GUN:


“Its of the trout tickling, dada loving, jazz pirate George Melly at a parade inspired by James Ensor’s painting ‘Entry of Christ’ into Brussels. The LE GUN version is: The entry of Marvin Gaye into Brussels… Marvin Gaye is riding into town on a donkey. He spent a lot of time in Belgium trying to get off crack. We have done a series of drawings based around the contents of a suitcase we found in the basement of a masonic cobblers in Hackney, which we believe belonged to the late George Melly. The drawing reflects our affection for the often overlooked cultural suburb of Belgium. We like the idea of a young Belgian surrealist wearing our Tracey Neuls shoes while becoming slowly intoxicated at A La Mort Subite…” – LE GUN

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

Here’s some more information from Tracey Neuls:


Tracey Neuls and LE GUN

Pioneering and of a single mind, Tracey Neuls choose her new shop where there is already great spirit and individuality – not unlike her original footwear. Building on the success of her West London Marylebone shop, she embarked on her second space – Eastside!

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

To celebrate this new venture, Tracey Neuls, famous for her creative collaborations has teamed up with the London illustration collective LE GUN.

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

Often described as ‘the gutter looking up to the sky’ LE GUN is responsible for some of the most thought provoking illustration work.‘Parade’ was one such piece that caught Neuls’ eye. “The idea of bringing the illustrative subject matter into movement via the actual body part was irresistible.”

LE GUN and Tracey Neuls

LE GUN painted the shop walls in their signature style, ink in one hand paintbrush in the other – an instant freestyle application of meandering illustration. They treated the retail space like a gallery. The combination of using another artist’s drawing with a Tracey Neuls shoe design makes for a perfect collaboration. It’s an enjoyable experience seeing a drawing being translated onto a shoe. Neuls, known for her keen eye for detail saw the instant potential of translating the art work to textile. Each limited edition shoe has a different part of the drawing, so therefore tells a different part of the story. The print was recreated as wrapping paper, so the narrative continues inside and out!


Designed in Hackney map:

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Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Nokia Pure font by Dalton Maag

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

London designers Dalton Maag have created a font for mobile phone brand Nokia to work in any language.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

Called Nokia Pure, it’s been designed to accommodate languages using Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets, plus Devanagari and Thai, with more languages including Chinese to follow.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

It was created primarily for digital screens but also transfers to print for use across all Nokia’s communications.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

The project was recently announced as winner of the graphics category in the Design Museum‘s Designs of the Year Awards. See all the winning projects in our earlier story.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

See more stories about typography on Dezeen »

Here’s some more information from Dalton Maag:


When Nokia decided that it was time to replace their font as part of their global rebrand, they came to Dalton Maag.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

Nokia is a world leader in the mobile phone industry, but its market share has recently been diminished by tough competition in the smartphone market. Sales of traditional, simple telephones, with limited media capacity are shrinking as users demand a complete communications platform from their mobile device.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

In order to reestablish itself as the premier manufacturer of stylish and highly-functional handsets, Nokia is simultaneously launching a brand new generation of mobile phones and upgrading its visual identity, which has been an important part of the company’s brand for nearly twenty years.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

Nokia’s existing font family was dominating its visual identity with its strong personality. This made it a difficult typeface to work with in a wider brand perspective, even though its condensed character width allowed for a good character count, and its high contrast meant it was easy to convert to pixels on older devices. It was felt that the design now looked dated and no longer reflected the design ethos of the company.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

Dalton Maag first became involved in the rebranding process when Nokia decided that it needed a new typographic direction for its communications. This would be combined with the launch of its new generation of mobile phones. It was the need for a new font family that united Nokia’s various departments, each with their own specific requirements, in a common approach to a shared problem.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

Dalton Maag was asked by Nokia to design a font family primarily for use in digital media (mobile devices and the web), which would also be versatile enough to be the cornerstone for all of Nokia’s communications worldwide. The new font family had to reflect the traditions of Finnish design: simplicity, clarity, functionality and beauty of form – in short, Pure.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

It needed to support languages using the Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets, as well as the Devanagari and Thai scripts in a first phase introduction. More languages, including Chinese, would follow in the future. Various weights would be required, and specific Display versions for use at larger sizes. The Text fonts also needed to be fully hinted to give the best possible screen display on handheld devices.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

During the initial phase, Ron Carpenter and Bruno Maag of Dalton Maag worked closely with the Nokia team, helping to establish the correct typographic expression by providing several potential design concepts. Discussions at regular meetings about the overall look and feel, but also the details of individual characters, delivered the distilled design of the new Nokia font family as it is now – Pure. Throughout this initial phase we supplied all parties with functioning beta fonts, allowing Nokia’s design team to implement the ideas in real life scenarios and from that make informed decisions on the choice of concept design.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

The first part of the project was a user interface (UI) font family consisting of Light, Regular, and Bold weights, featuring a fully hinted Dalton Maag Standard character set. These UI fonts, now named Nokia Pure Text, were also designed to function perfectly in print at body copy sizes, making them suitable for Nokia’s own internal communication needs and other small-size print copy.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

A set of distinct Display weights, derived from the Text design, with tighter spacing and small changes in contrast, were needed for titling and other larger-sized branding environments. Covering the same Light, Regular, and Bold as the Text fonts, the Display font family also features Thin and ExtraBold weights.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

As soon as the original design concepts were established, we began work in parallel to expand the fonts to the various script systems that Nokia needed for effective communication. Dalton Maag’s design and engineering teams made sure that each incremental font upgrade was released in a controlled fashion to ensure that everyone involved was in possession of the latest version.

Nokia Pure Font by Dalton Maag

We successfully guided the client through this important stage in their business’s development by helping to define a new visual language that spans different media and scripts. The result is a distinctive and sustainable typographically-driven brand, where the client can rely on our highly-skilled design and engineering team to help and support them in the future.

Down on the Upside

TomFord Said So