CR April issue: redesign

CR’s April cover. Illustration: Anthony Burrill

Creative Review has been redesigned with a new size, new paper, new typography and, yes, a new logo

 

Last month we celebrated our 30th birthday. It seemed the perfect moment to reinvent the magazine if we wanted to ensure its continued success over the next three decades.

There are two specific aims for the redesign: to create a better physical product and to get across the repositioning of our editorial stance that has been developing over the past two years.

Our website has been a fantastic success, bringing us hundreds of thousands of new readers from all over the world. But, inevitably, it raises questions over the printed magazine.

Print as filter: the new Grid spread brings together a month in images, from galleries, books and the web, as researched by the CR team

We knew that we needed to make the printed magazine even more distinct from the website. It had to be more tactile, more of a joy to handle, better quality. But finding the resources to do that is not easy in the face of a recession that has affected advertising, and therefore paginations and revenues, so badly.

We discovered that changes to the Royal Mail’s pricing structure meant that, by reducing the size of the magazine slightly to 250mm square we could save money. Which is all fine but not worth doing if the smaller format doesn’t feel right. So we had some old copies of the magazine cut down to the new size and found that it really worked. It felt good in the hand.

Then, we thought, what if we took the money that we would save from the size reduction and put it (and more) into the paper stocks. So instead of 90 gsm, the text pages are now on 135 gsm with Crit on 115 gsm uncoated. Instead of 250gsm, the coverstoack is now 300gsm. The thickest, best paper CR has never been on. Despite the mail cost saving, we are now spending more money per month on the production of the magazine, but we believe that our readers will appreciate the result – the pictures here don’t do it justice. You have to pick up a copy to really appreciate what a difference the new paper makes..

What’s On page from the front section

So we felt happy that new format and paper stock could deliver on our first requirement. The second involved some design changes.

Over the last two years, in response both to our readers’ wishes and the impact of the internet, the magazine has become less about simply displaying work and more about discussing that work. More than a year and a half ago, we dropped the 12-page Work section that displayed new projects with short captions and replaced it with an expanded Crit section of discussion and reviews. We wanted the design to reflect that CR is not simply a showcase magazine. We will show you great work, but we will also have something to say.

The new logo gives us more of a personality and much more of a presence on the newsstand (where up to half of our sales come from). Yes, the old logo worked well but it didn’t articulate what we wanted to get across about CR. It’s about recognising that the magazine is not just a blank canvas but the home of varied and strong opinions, whether from regular CR columnists, from those in the industry or from our Readers’ Panel.

Great images. Big: the new Hi-Res section

But that doesn’t mean we won’t be displaying great images. Our new sections The Grid and Hi-Res aim to deliver the visual hit that only print can bring. (Yes, we know The Guardian does something similar but it really should be a feature of CR too).

Features maintain a neutral stance, presenting the work without the design getting in the way (as we have always believed is right) and using Theinhardt, a new grotesk from Optimo, as the main display face. Each month we will present a case study of a new project which talks through the process and then asks a selection of industry figures to comment on the result (this month’s looks at Research Studios’ work for the BBC).

And a profile piece will showcase the career of a major figure, in this case, David James.

Other features this month include this extract from Eliza Williams’ new book This Is Advertising

The more opinionated stance of Crit is suggested by uncoated paper stock and the use of the more expressive typeface, Dala Floda, designed by Paul Barnes, which is also used in the logo. Dala Floda has its roots in tradition but feels contemporary and a little quirky – which seemd like a pretty neat fit with what we are trying to achieve for the magazine.

The redesign was done by our art director, Paul Pensom, but Paul Barnes worked with us a consultant on the typography, advising us on typeface choices, page furniture and the logo. For drop caps and other ornaments, we have used characters from a new project of his involving the revival and digitisation of the St Bride type archive (more on this in a later post). We’ve just used Caslon Shaded but there will be a lot more faces available in the future.

We hope that you enjoy the new-look Creative Review. It’s out on March 24.

 

Paper
Cover: Claro 300gsm
Text pages: Galerie Art Matt 135gsm
Crit: Festival Offset 115gsm.
Supplied by James McNaughton

Type
Text: Lyon, designed by Kai Bernau, available from Commercial Type.
Logo, small headlines: Dala Floda, designed by Paul Barnes.
Display: Theinhardt, designed by François Rappo, available from Optimo.
Ornaments, drop caps etc: Caslon Shaded, revived by Paul Barnes for the St Bride Type Foundry.

 

Art for anything that is sound

Unit Editions’ first newsprint publication unearths a selection of covers that Ronald Clyne designed for esoteric US record label, Folkways. The work, and the story of the label’s almost sacred mission, make for a compelling read…

Clyne, who died in 2006, made over 500 sleeves for the Folkways label, which was founded by Polish-born Moses ‘Moe’ Asch in New York in 1948. Under Asch’s direction, the label evolved into a fascinating repository for field recordings, spoken word, poetry and indigenous compositions.

The label helped to bring native folk traditions to a wider public and recorded, among others, Lead Belly, Burt Ives, Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger. Bob Dylan was also a fan of the label’s output and recalls his early ambitions to record for the label, as a natural home for his music, in the first part of his Chronicles autobiography.

In one of two essays bookending the Unit Editions collection, Adrian Shaughnessy suggests that Folkways had the characteristics of “a social enterprise”, that it was almost “a non-for-profit organisation.” Clearly not in the business for financial gain, the scale of “musical bio-diversity” that Asch presented through his label is incredible.

There are the songs of the Ulster Orangemen and collections of Catalonian folk artists; psalms from Cameroon and modernist poetry from Charles Olson. Sir Edmund Hillary’s reminiscences of his mountaineering campaigns even made it onto vinyl – one of over 2,000 albums that emerged from the label.

If Folkways had a remit it was, as Asch himself put it, “Anything that is sound, from Indonesian folk music to James Joyce reading his own poetry.”

Yet however diverse and appealing Folkways’ subject matter was, Clyne’s creative work for the label has largely been ignored by design history. From the 1950s to the 1980s he designed hundreds of covers, working on sleeves for many of the recordings by electronic, avant-garde and jazz artists, in addition to the label’s folk releases.

Clyne was apparently an avid collector of art from New Guinea and Vanuatu and many references to ethnic art and design feature on his sleeves. Indeed, all of his cover designs have, says Shaughnessy, “an unpretentious, unselfconscious graphic purity” that make great use of two-colour printing on matt paper.

This production process was in part an economic strategy, but one that became an integral aspect of Clyne’s approach which remained un-showy, understated and, like the Folkways sound itself, authentic throughout.

Unit: Design/Research 01 – Ronald Clyne at Folkways is available now (£7.50 including p&p) from uniteditions.com. Editors: Tony Brook and Adrian Shaughnessy. Design: David McFarline and Claudia Klat at Spin. Project co-ordinator: Natasha Day for Unit Editions.

In 1987, in accordance with his wishes, Moe Asch’s family transferred the Folkways label to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, with the proviso that all 2,168 albums remain in print in perpetuity. (A quick search and I’ve already got some “Tuvan multiphonic throat singing” bookmarked). There is also a filmed interview with Clyne at the Smithsonian Institution site here, and more on Moe Asch at Ralph Rinzler’s Folklife Archives and Collections website, here.

Folding Plug wins Design of the Year

The innovative Folding Plug designed by South Korean student Min-Kyu Choi has won the top prize in the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year Awards…

Choi’s radical redesign of the humble three-pin plug came about after his Macbook Air (the world’s thinnest laptop) suffered scratches from its bulky plug that he had placed in his laptop bag (the UK plug is the world’s largest, apparently).

The UK plug has in fact changed little since it was designed in 1946. Choi’s design allows the plug to be folded down to a width of just 10mm. It is currently on show as part of the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year show at London’s Design Museum. A recent graduate of the Royal College of Art’s Design Product MA, Choi has also turned his hand to designing a folding suitcase.

Deyan Sudjic, director of the Design Museum said, “It’s great to see such a practical but elegant demonstration of what design can do to make everyday life so much better. Min-Kyu Choi is a designer just setting out on his career and he clearly has a great future ahead of him.” A short video on Choi’s plug is on YouTube, here.

The individual Brit Insurance category winners were announced last week as follows:

Architecture Award 2010: Monterrey Housing, Mexico by Elemental (Chile). 

Fashion Award 2010: Plato’s Atlantis show by Alexander McQueen – Spring / Summer ’10 collection (UK).

Furniture Award 2010: Grassworks (below) by Jair Straschnow (The Netherlands).

Graphic Award 2010: The Newspaper Club by Ben Terrett, Russell Davies and Tom Taylor (UK).

Interactive Award 2010: The EyeWriter (below) by members of Free Art and Technology, openFrameworks, Graffiti Research La, The Ebeling Group and Tony Quan (USA).

Product Award 2010: Folding Plug by Min-Kyu Choi (UK).

Transport Award 2010:  E430 Electric Aircraft by Yuneec International (China).

Find out more about each of the winning designs at the links above and at the Designs of the Year website.

The Designs of the Year exhibition has also recently been extended to October 31.

In the next issue of CR, our Reader’s Panel reveal what they thought of their tour of the show.

 

David James: Out of Print

Designer and art director David James has steadfastly refused to step into the limelight, until now.  An online exhibition presents his 20-year portfolio for the first time

Born just outside Manchester, originally made his name designing record sleeves, worked with the late great Trevor Key and Nick Knight before moving to fashion and establishing himself as one of the leading art directors of his generation: no, not Peter Saville but a designer with a somewhat less developed public persona, David James.

 

James has resolutely shunned the public eye. He routinely refuses interview requests, there’s no glossy monograph and he has never set foot on a conference stage.

But his career has reached a point where it is about to make a major change of direction and James has decided to say a public goodbye to his work in print. As we mentioned in our March issue, James’s work for Prada is shifting toward moving image, with even the print ad campaigns being stills taken from the moving image footage. Over the next year, James will reposition his studio toward working in this way and away from print.

David James: Out of Print is an online exhibition of highlights from James’s career to date. Beginning with his first solo project (a catalogue for clothes brand Moto printed on plastic, shown top) it charts his early career designing record sleeves for the likes of Soul II Soul and, notably, System 7, the electronic outfit named after the Apple Mac operating system for whom James created a series of memorable sleeves with photographer Trevor Key (Limited Addition shown below).

 

In 1995 James moved into editorial with A Be Sea, a large format newsprint ‘visual paper’ which he designed with long-term collaborator Gareth Hague. Each issue was named after a consecutive letter of the alphabet: for Issue I (below) all the headlines were shot on Super 8 film then re-photographed

While Issue G featured a series of abstract forms

 

James is probably best-known for his work for Prada for whom he has been art director since 1997. He first got involved with the brand at the invitation of photographer Glen Luchford. The pair pitched some ideas which became the Spring Summer 97 ad campaign (below).

 

For each Prada show James produces exquisite invitations, mixing materials to create lavish pieces of communication.

 

 

While, under his creative directorship, Another and AnotherMan magazines have been notable for their typographic experimentation

 

Because he has shunned the ‘celebrity designer’ route, James has become almost the forgotten man of British graphic design. This online exhibition, which will come down on 15 May, is a welcome opportunity to view a beautiful body of work.

David James: Out of Print

David James will be profiled in the April issue of Creative Review, out March 24

Being a hipster doesn’t always make you happy

It was never too soon for little Serge to learn the dulcet tones of his namesake

Unhappy Hipsters is a tumblr blog that’s kept us highly amused for the last few days. Featuring imagery culled from various interiors magazines, it suggests that concrete floors, Eames chairs and moustaches don’t always equate with personal well-being…

(Above photo: Dean Kaufman; Dwell, July/August 2006)

You know the types of houses and loft spaces that regularly appear in the high-end lifestyle press? The compiler of Unhappy Hipsters makes regular use of photography from magazines like Dwell and Wallpaper* but with biting reinterpretation.

Where they feature, the kids and fashionable pets add a particularly sad note to the existential proceedings.

Check out the blog at unhappyhipsters.com. Here are some recent favourites:

“Nutmeg sat stoically atop the cushions. Yet her internal dialogue was a cacophony of discordant thoughts, mostly centered on the absurdity of the double Nelson clocks.” (Photo: Joao Canziani; Dwell)


“This time it was ‘Mondrian: From Naturalism to Abstraction’, but at least the TV was finally on.” (Photo: Chad Holder; Dwell, April/May 2005)


“The stools huddled together, braced for another one of his incoherent solo poetry slams.” (Photo: Noah Webb; Dwell)

 

The new look BJP

The British Journal of Photography relaunched last week with an extensive redesign. It’s much improved but does it rise to the editor’s own challenge of becoming a beautiful photographic magazine?

The relaunch issue is the BJP’s 7,774th edition – the magazine started as a monthly title in 1854, changing to a weekly in 1864. 146 years later it reverts to its original monthly format. One reason given for the recent change is that its readers are apparently now more likely to seek out news stories on bjp-online.com, while longer features and analysis still find a more favourable home in print.

The relaunch pushes some new sections within the magazine, including Projects (above) – where series of works are displayed and discussed – and Portfolio, which examines the output of a single photographer. And over its considerable 100 pages, it’s clear that the magazine has plenty to say: the content is extensive, with features on established photographers giving way to shorter pieces on new work and reviews.

The cover of the new issue features an arresting image by Reed + Rader, cover lines that work well as a list of contents, while a bold headline supports the main image as the lead story. But it does seem to suffer from a wealth of information fighting for space.

The BJP probably has one of the longest titles out there – 27 characters no less, hence the usual initialism. Coupled with taglines “A Different Take” and “The world’s longest-running photography magazine, established 1854”, another cover line, all in the upper fifth portion of the cover, it does make for a masthead that feels a little cramped.

The cover, as so many magazines do presently, echoes some of the key stylings that designer and art director Jop van Bennekom has created for titles such as Re- and Fantastic Man. The design of the short-lived Pictured magazine from a few years ago, perhaps also suggested a direction that the new BJP might take (its previous incarnation is shown below).

The BJP before the redesign

Under the creative direction of the BJP’s art editor, Mick Moore, a selection of new fonts have also been brought in for the redesign: headings are set in Farnham Display from Font Bureau (currently also used by CR); body text in Skolar from TypeTogether (above – note the ligatures at ‘ct’ and ‘st’); while nibs, captions and panels use the sans serif face, Gotham Narrow, from Hoefler & Frere-Jones.

Interestingly, in his column editor Simon Bainbridge makes the point that “Architects and graphic designers have beautiful magazines to read, so why not professional photographers?”

It’s a question that we’ve raised numerous times in the office ourselves. Despite the preponderance of fantastic photographic work out there, why are there so few devoted photography magazines that have risen to the challenge of being beautiful?

In line with Bainbridge’s own questioning, the new issue of the BJP doffs its cap to a selection of magazines that already do photography really well: Amusement, Russian Esquire, Candy, Garden & Gun, Rouleur and The New York Times Magazine (with pages from Ryan McGinley’s series of Winter Olympics pictures shown from the latter).

It’s a timely feature and alludes to the kind of company that the BJP sees itself amongst, even if the best efforts of van Bennekom are perhaps conspicuously absent.

Looking through the new issue, however, it’s clear that the redesign has refreshed the purpose and intent of one of the world’s longest running creative titles. It’s equally as impressive to see it assert the power of the printed photograph in such turbluent times for publishing.

The British Journal of Photography is on sale the first Wednesday of every month, priced at £6.99. More at bjp-online.com.

 

Nice publications: Bumper Edition!

This hefty 600 page tome is the fruit of a collaboration between Dutch magazine Fluff and Nike Skateboarding (Nike SB). Nike gave Fluff full creative freedom to come up with a document that celebrated Nike’s SB teams in Europe and Fluff commissioned photographer Marcel Veldman to visit no less than 19 countries across Europe and hang out with skateboarders both on and off their boards. The book features  images of over 100 skateboarders doing what they do best: pulling tricks in a huge variety of urban environments – and, but of course, arsing about at parties. There are interviews a-plenty and lots of nice editorial design – as well as full bleed photography and sequential action shots… Nice book, but weighing in at about three kilos, it’s not something you’d want in your backpack on a trip to the skatepark… To see video footage taken during Veldman’s 150 day European roadtrip – visit the book’s accompanying website: fluff-sb.com/


The Fluff SB Book project was supervised, art directed, designed and published by Dutch design agency vijf890

 

This is the fifth issue of Centrefold, a large format (A3) bi-annual publication which showcases the work of leading photographers, artists and designers within the creative industries. This issue is The Vintage Issue and contains several photo stories which look to evoke the 60s and 70s by re-imagining defining pop cultural moments and events from those periods, with the models all sporting looks using mainly vintage clothing sourced from Beyond Retro, Elio Ferraro and Bolongaro Trevor, among others. There’s lots of full bleed imagery and the typographic introductory pages, designed by Julian Morey, who worked with Tom Lardner on the issue’s design and art direction, are really nice. The cover (above) features an illustration by Michael Gillette… Centrefold has a blog at centrefoldmagazine.blogspot.com

 

This is the catalogue that accompanies artist Kamil Kuskowski’s exhibition, The Truth of Painting, which ran earlier in the year at the Piekary Gallery in Poznan, Poland. Seven different stocks, coated and coloured, were utilised to accenuate several techniques used by the artist in his work. “There are four chapters in the catalogue,” explains its designer, Ryszard Bienert of 3group, “each with its own distinct colour and paper stock. The aim was to allude to the techniques and bold colours used by the artist but at the same time keep it simple and uncluttered, in keeping with the artists work.”

 

Ouroboros is the first publication in Nobrow‘s new 17×23 series: “a new graphic short story project designed to help talented young graphic novelists tell their stories in a manageable and economic format.” The name of the series, 17×23, refers to the format size (in centimetres). The name of this particular 26 page book by illustrator Ben Newman, Ouroboros, meanwhile, refers to an ancient symbol depicting a snake or dragon swallowing its own tail and forming a circle. His story mirrors this concept by cleverly ending precisely as it begins, thus creating a never ending, circular story. Charming stuff – here are a few spreads…

Ouroboros is priced at a very reasonable £8.50 from nobrow.net/ 

 

Melissa Auf der Maur (MAdM) was a member of Courtney Love’s band Hole – and she also played with The Smashing Pumpkins for their farewell tour in 2000.  Now she’s about to release her second solo album entitled Out Of Our Minds (OOOM) which will encompass various elements besides just a collection of 12 songs. There will be a 28minute film (directed by Tony Stone and starring MAdM) and a twelve page comic book (cover shown above / spreads below) illustrated by Brooklyn-based artist Jack Forbes – which mirrors the story of the film…

“OOOM began as a song,” explains Auf der Maur of the project. “It was half way through the first decade of the 21st Century and technology had just begun to dismantle the music business. It was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The landscape changed and I began to morph my roots in visual arts with the music. The many portals of OOOM invite listeners and viewers to discover on their own, at their own pace and in their own space.” 

Find out more about the OOOM project at xmadmx.com/ooom/

We were recently sent this booklet (just under A4, landscape format) by its author and designer, Jim Williams – a senior lecturer in graphics at Staffordshire University – along with a note explaining that he created it to hand out to his students. It’s a great introduction to typography and includes tips on kerning numbers, ligatures and ampersands, apostrophes and quotation marks and plenty more… Williams can be contacted through the University’s Faculty of Arts, Media and Design on +44(0) 1782 294415 or by email at j.g.williams@staffs.ac.uk

This is the cover of photographer Amanda Marsalis’ self published book, Lost At Sea – which is a collection of Polaroid images shot over two years which, she tells us, “run the course of a love affair.” The cover has an embossed Polaroid frame which hints at the contents. It’s full of beautiful Polaroid imagery taken on beaches, planes, boats, balconies and other locations. Here are a few spreads. See more of Marsalis’ work at amandamarsalis.com/

 

Illustrator Nigel Peake self publishes small books and zines as and when he feels like it. He actually sent us a copy of his 28 page A5 zine, Des Constructions de panneux publicitaries dessines pour une ville Francaise (Billboard constructions for a French town) at the end of last year (opening page shown above, spreads below) but it got lost under a pile of publications on a desk (OK, it was my desk) here at CR. Having recently uncovered it, I though it only right to showcase it. Some lovely illustrations of what I can only assume are imagined signage constructions for French shops and services…

 

Ah, just in time to feature in this blog post, Manzine issue 3 landed on our doormat here at CR towers today. And what a cracking issue it is – complete with a free colour Ralph Steadman print and also a colour feature entitled Saddamski which features photography by Andreas Lux and commentary by Daniel West documenting the pair’s visit to the former Iraqi embassy in East Berlin which is now empty and in (glorious) decay… At a glance the issue looks great. Looking forward to reading on the tube on the way home. Here are some spreads:

Manzine info can be found at themanzine.com/

CR’s 30 cover: behind the scenes

A lot of you have written in to say how much you liked our current cover, celebrating our 30th birthday issue. The cover was art directed by Rachel Thomas and shot at her studio in London by Marcel Christ: here’s some making-of shots

On the day of the shoot, Stroma Cairns, one of Rachel’s team, documented the process, which involved blowing large amounts of coloured confetti into the air (and unfortunately sweeping it all up and recycling it afterwards)

Keen-eyed readers may have noticed that several ’30s’ are hidden in the final image – the number 30 is featured on the plan chest drawers at the back of the studio,

the copy of David Hockney’s Camera Works on the table is open at page 30 (not so easy to spot that one…)

and the cover was shot on January 30, as shown on the calendar

 

Our thanks to Rachel and to her agent Bianca Redgrave and also to Celloglas who picked out a 30 on the cover in high-build varnish and foiled the logo

 

Kicking ass in six frames

David Rigby has won Little White Lies’ competition to condense a favourite film into a six panel comic strip, with his take on Zombieland (detail shown, above). We have his comic, plus a selection of some of the other best entrants here on the CR blog…

Sporting a cover by comics legend John Romita Jr., the new issue of Little White Lies has new film Kick Ass as its featured title; a tale of a high school student who decides to become a super hero, despite having no special powers, adapted from Romita Jr’s and Mark Millar’s comic book.

To coincide with having Kick Ass as its lead film, LWL ran a readers competition to transform a favourite film into a six panel comic strip. The winner was David Rigby, who cast an ironic eye over the nuances of the film Zombieland, and whose entry features in the new issue of LWL out March 4 alongside two runners-up strips. The best of the rest will also be included in a special digital edition published March 5.

Until then, Rigby’s work plus the two runners-up are shown in full below, followed by several of the best entries, which include six panel digests of Total Recall, The Wicker Man, Seven, Adaptation, Flash Gordon and The Road.

The new issue of Little White Lies is available to buy, here

Zombieland by David Rigby (winner)

Seven by Mat Bond (runner up)

Total Recall by Matt Boyce (runner-up)

American Psycho by Claire Murray

The Road by David Pye

The Wicker Man by Hurk

Man On Wire by Jack Noel

Flash Gordon by Mark Taplin

Adaptation by Phil Marsden

2001 by Rich Johnston

And here’s John Romita Jr.’s fantastic cover for the new issue:

Leslie redesigns FHM

 

Along with its rivals, men’s monthly FHM has been floundering of late. Will a redesign by magCulture’s Jeremy Leslie inject some much-needed life into the magazine?

We’re not sure how many of our readers regularly peruse the flesh-filled pages of FHM but you are probably aware that the men’s magazine sector as a whole has been going through a slump. So we were interested to hear that Jeremy Leslie, founder of the magCulture blog and CR columnist had been brought in by FHM to redesign the title. Leslie reveals what he has been up to and why.

 

 

CR: How did you come to be involved with FHM?
The publishers, Bauer, contacted me last year with a couple of potential projects. One didn’t work out, but FHM went live. I’m probably known for more niche magazine projects, both in terms of the magCulture blog and my design work. But in a previous role I worked on the country’s biggest circulation magazine [for Sky], and magCulture consciously covers both mainstream and independent magazines. In design terms both areas of publishing share a lot of the same issues. Whatever the project in hand is, you’re designing content in a manner appropriate for the audience. FHM has to compete with others in its market, and design can help.

CR: Did you have any reservations about working on it? What were you hoping to  achieve?
I did have reservations to do with getting involved in the declining men’s market but in the end I realised that was the interesting challenge, working in a very tough part of the market. It was also quickly very clear what the design issues were with the magazine. In its time FHM was a classic piece of editorial innovation, and over the years it had wandered off in strange directions. The new editor wanted to focus on its core – being a men’s magazine that was sexy, fun and useful. I didn’t dislike the previous design, there were some strong elements, but it was wrong for FHM. We wanted to return the magazine to its roots, make it more confident and masculine.

CR: What were the main problems with the magazine as it was before?
There were two main problems. First, as I said, the design aesthetic was wrong for FHM. It was more that of a niche fashion title  – the design was too present on the page, distracting from rather than helping the content. Second, the various parts of the magazine lacked their own identity, they shared the same set of design devices and so as a whole lacked pace and variation. I developed separate identities for the sections and worked on making the design less obvious, trying to make it almost invisible.

 

CR: Walk us through the main sections and what you have tried to do in each plus typeface choices etc…
At an early stage a decision was made to clearly define sections as text- or picture-led, and to build the design around these definitions. Access is the welcome section, where the reader interacts with the magazine through the letters page etc. This was the first section to fall into place, featuring a bold, masculine design with plenty of signature red and black. It’s a text-orientated section and uses a six-column grid to break it up.

 

Then comes Filter, the 20 must have/do/see events for the upcoming month as seen from an FHM point of view. This uses a similar typography to Access but is picture-led and uses a looser grid to provide areas of white space. Each item opens with the same set of information that can appear in various sizes and relationships to help with pace. Each item is numbered and there are various devices around the page that add playful detail.

 

The main features have their own identity again, the opening spreads making big bold statements. Previously, features tended to be over-complicated with multiple ideas clashing. The new design relies on singular ideas being developed to be as visually strong, direct and confident as possible.

 

Then at the back is Upgrade, a complex manual-like section that is still work in progress. This is hardcore information, using illustration and diagrams to bring the content to life.

 

Sprinkled throughout are the girls, which remain central to the magazine. Again, there had been a tendency to overcomplicate these pages, so we simplified these to make the most of the shoots and avoid odd white space on the gutters. The FHM team know their girls – it was a matter of presentation again.

Typographically, the whole thing is basically the Hoefler & Frere Jones catalogue. Most of the Knockout variations feature in for the section heads and a long-time favourite of mine,Verlag, for the body copy. The features add Tungsten for headlines and Cyrus Highsmith’s Prenza for the longer read text.

CR: Was there anything that you really wanted to get through that didn’t make the cut?
The management team were very supportive of the project as a whole, but there was one major element I was disappointed didn’t make the final cut. The FHM logo has never done the brand justice in my opinion, so I developed a new one based on the heaviest form of Knockout. It was similar enough to the old one to not confuse the reader, but was far more masculine and confident. But it didn’t go through.

Instead, I’ve rationalized the use of the existing logo, specifying the size at which it’s used on the front cover (previously its size varied) and ending the use of random colours. For now the logo will always be either red, with white as a back up if required.