The Small Stakes

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Jason Munn is a designer working out of Oakland California, with a knack for band posters. He started The Small Stakes in 03 with a focus on the music industry. Since then he’s produced work locally and internationally, lots of great minimalistic projects up on his site.

Call for Entries: A poster 4 Tomorrow

From Press Release:
Poster4Tomorrow is online and open for entries from September 3. Entries will be accepted until November 15, and winners will be announced in December. The best 100 posters will be published in a book and exhibited in Paris. Five of them will be placed in the permanent collection of the Lahti Poster Museum in Finland. Select winners will also receive prizes including workshops at the école intuit/lab and
subscriptions to graphic design magazine étapes.

To find out more go here.

Celebrating Columbus Day

Thanks James Victore.

Where the Wild Things Are Posters

Après le superbe trailer diffusé en mars dernier, voici la mise en ligne de cinq affiches présentant les personnages de Where the Wild Things Are. Le prochain film du réalisateur Spike Jonze sera une production Warner Bros, dans les salles le 16 octobre 2009.



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Previously on Fubiz

Good 50X70: Design for Good

Good 50X70 is an international initiative that we at Visual Culture have been both participants and huge supporters of over the last three years. Recently, we’ve had the pleasure of dialoguing with Good 50X70 co-founders Tommaso Minnetti and Pasquale Volpe on how it all began, the evolution, and the knowledge gained within the journey.


VC: Congrats on your third year of Good 50X70. Could you share a few highlights with us?

TM: I’d say that one of the most interesting things we did this year was to organize 3 workshops with 3 of our jury members here in Milan. It has been truly great to see how much people we gathered for the event and I’m really proud we managed to do something that might be an important and meaningful experience in the future career of the students who participated.


From Woody Pirtle Workshop in Milan

VC: What began as an idea has evolved into a growing initiative to raise awareness on pressing issues our world faces. What sparked this concept and how did you make it happen?

TM: We just wanted to do something that gave us a good feeling while being effective for the client. We don’t despise professional work for commercial clients, it’s something you can’t avoid doing. A smart client who gives you some trust can bring a lot of satisfactions too, but there’s nothing like doing the job you like for causes that you can really believe in.

Rather than making it happen, we just tried doing it, and strangely enough it worked. To be honest, we were the first ones to be amazed by the results. This is also what we constantly say when we’re talking to students in our seminars, everybody has the tools to make a difference, but you have to give yourself the chance. What we did was simply build a tool for others to make a difference. If you give people the chance, they’ll go for it.

It has to be said that although we made it happen one way or the other, we’re far from being able to say we actually “made it”. We’re very far from economical sustainability. We’re still trying to give our project the sort of structure that could keep it going without having to be scared about the future.

VC: Throughout your careers has ‘design for good’ been a consistent theme?

TM: It was more of a red thread, but it changed in many ways over the years. Our first work experiences are connected to very commercial, not environmentally conscious clients. In a way, that helped us to develop a conscience about the problem. I imagine communication students getting out of school right now are involved in green (or greenwashing) projects no matter who they work for, and this might make them less aware of the fact that there’s a strikingly unbalanced situation in terms of communication of social issues.

I guess you could say we’re now closing the circle, as more and more of our time is spent doing work you could define agency work, but now for the kind of clients, charities, we always wanted to help. There’s still a very long way to go though.

VC: Your jury list is an impressive group and represents the global community in a nice way. How did you get them on board and what was your thinking behind the selections?


Poster by jury member Woody Pirtle

TM: In a way, getting our jury together has been one of the easiest parts of the whole project. Designers like the ones we contacted are generally quite illuminated persons that understand why their help could be very valuable for an initiative like ours. To select them, we just looked at all the people we could look at with admiration, both for their professional experience and for their social commitment.


Poster by jury member Lourdes Zolezzi

Now we are in a weird situation where people we consider a great source of inspiration in our professional work finds it amazing what we managed to put up. That makes us really proud of course, although most of the time we think they’re just being polite…

VC: What have been some of the challenges in running an initiative of this kind? What have you learned year to year?

TM: We learned a lot. It’s a bit difficult to summarize because it wasn’t really about eureka moments, but a very organic process where the complexity of what we were handling grew together our skills. We learned what it means to not be able to withstand expectations, no matter how hard you try. We also learned that you can find amazing people along the way that can give you more help than you would have ever asked for, just because they share your own idea.

VC: Good 50X70 has been embraced by the design community with the participation rate growing every year. Where do you see the majority of the participation coming from? Students? Young Professionals?

TM: It’s something between these two groups, and lately we’ve noticed this border has been consistently blurring. Of course, there are professionals with a lot of experience participating, but it is difficult to beat the workload that can deliver an entire class working on the briefs. The participation of schools and universities is very determinant in the volume of the entries. We like the idea that year by year students get Good 50×70’s briefs as part of their education, it’s exactly why we started all of this.

VC: What sustainable processes/methods were used in regards to the annual exhibition in Italy and the corresponding book. Give us some insight into your design thinking behind materials, paper stock etc.

TM: Our paper is always FSC certified paper. In Italy, we have done all of the book printing so far, it is easy to find printers that are happy to use low alcohol or water based inks. The kind of exhibition we designed doesn’t need specific structures to be build, in fact we use grill walls normally used on building sites.

To print our posters the most ecological approach you can have is to print digitally. To avoid printing endlessly the same posters, we try to ship the same posters to who wants to put up an exhibition. Transportation is something that can be easily offset and to an extent more ecologically viable than reprinting, although of course is a matter of distance.

VC: Have any of the posters been used in campaigns by the charities of the competition? If so, can you share a success story?

TM: The biggest success came this year, as one of the posters from the competition has been selected by Greenpeace Italy for their campaign against the government effort to make new nuclear power plants in Italy.


THE SCREAM | Malgorzata Bedowska | Poland

There are many other little stories that we don’t often tell anybody about, but that make us really proud because we’re making a practical difference. For instance we helped a tiny publication made by a charity in Zimbabwe to spread information about HIV and AIDS. We also helped preparing a communication manual for Chinese NGOs, to help them in making better communication.

VC: Good 50X70 has expanded into local initiatives like Good Amsterdam, Good Suriname… How have these extensions of the initiative been received?

TM: The local initiatives are an expression of the fact that Good 50×70 doesn’t want to be a fixed, structured entity that doesn’t change in time. We’re trying to evolve, adapt our model the different necessities we’re facing from time to time. Both those projects have been sort of tests, to get ready to go in the sort of direction where we would like to take the project. There is a need for Good 50×70 to be more effective, focusing on real projects that have a tangible impact on everyone’s lives, and we think this is the way to go to get there.

VC: What should we expect in 2010.

TM: Unfortunately it’s really hard to say what to expect from us as our resources are somewhat limited and the economic crisis put quite a significant challenge for us. Still, I hope that more people will be able to attend our exhibitions through a larger exhibition tour and through our catalogue being finally distributed through official channels.

Apart from that, what I would really like to see is our project becoming better at tackling the practical communication issues of many charities, thus making a real change.

Bottled Water is the Primary Cause of Restless Leg Syndrome

This clever Tappening advertising campaign challenges the notion of Truth in Advertising while embracing an opposing concept. Lying. Tappening co-founders ask, “Why is it some bottled water brands still don’t list their source?” and encourage their rapidly-growing customer base to “start a lie” themselves…

The campaign will include a website where anyone can go to “start their own lie” at www.startalie.com, and can view or download a series of four ads to pass to their friends–which are all lies. This ad series includes:

1. Bottled Water Makes Acid Rain Fall on Playgrounds
2. Bottled Water is the Primary Cause of Restless Leg Syndrome
3. Bottled Water Causes Blindness in Puppies
4. Bottled Water: 98% Melted Ice Caps. 2% Polar Bear Tears




‘Be a Part of the Action’

“Historically posters have been inextricably linked with cause-related campaigns. Visually striking, often iconic and frequently iconoclastic, posters grab the attention like no other medium. They effectively help spread a succinct message and in doing so shift attitudes and contribute to significant changes within society.” That’s the view of Greenpeace Australia Pacific who recently awarded a winner in the Greenpeace Design Awards.”

Sam Dickson’s winning poster “We can’t always rely on someone else to save the world.” was selected out of 1,500 creative entries from 77 countries. To see other finalists posters from the competition go here.

GreenPeace Design Awards Announced

The short-list of the GreenPeace Design Awards has been released. The winners will be announced at the Awards ceremony on July 31st, 2009. The above poster by Spencer Harrison was one of the pieces to make the short-list. View the full gallery here.

Baseball Posters

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Check out these posters designed for Japanese baseball team the Chiba Lotte Marines.

Would be fantastic if the Blue Jays could do something so cool. Via Deadspin.

Good 50×70

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It’s a poster contest being held in Milan, where hundreds were invited to submit designs that draw attention to a number of different social issues. The concept’s great and there’ll be lots to look at, as they’ve ’short’ listed 210 posters for the June 19th showing/judging.