Studio 360 Picks a Winner for Their Uncle Sam Rebranding Contest

Back in early May, we told you that our pals over at Studio 360 had launched another contest to re-brand something iconic (following their redesigns of Valentine’s Day and the Gay Pride flag). This time, it was Uncle Sam, just in time for July 4th. They’ve released the follow-up episode, showing off the entries and talking about the process, which found both superb illustrator/designer Kate Bingaman-Burt getting her Portland State University students involved with the project, and our own former co-editor Alissa Walker doing the judging to find a winner. So no more talk for this writer, as you must go look and listen immediately:

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Lord Foster quits House of Lords

Dezeenwire: British architect Lord Norman Foster has surrendered his seat in the House of Lords in order to retain his non-resident tax status and avoid paying full British taxes. Foster will be able to retain his title despite his resignation – The Press Association.

Wallpaper* August issue – with CR designed cover

Our subscriber copy of Wallpaper* magazine’s August edition (The Handmade Issue) arrived in the post today – sporting a front cover that we designed ourselves here at Creative Review…

Regular readers of this blog might remember that just over a month ago we posted about Wallpaper* magazine’s nifty online app developed specially to allow subscribers to the magazine to design their own front cover using a variety of graphic assets supplied by artists including Anthony Burrill, James Joyce, The Hort, Kam Tang and Nigel Robinson.

Using the app, here’s the design we submitted (using graphic elements created by James Joyce) to be printed on our very own subscriber copy of the magazine:

You’ll notice that on the submitted design, we placed a graphic label that says ‘The Handmade Issue’ top right of the cover design – under the masthead. This was mandatory – you had to place it somewhere on your cover design. Today it became clear why.

What we couldn’t work out originally was how Wallpaper* were going to make sure every subscriber taking part got the right cover. It turns out that the label device is used for the address details that you had to enter into the site when creating your design, so that they were printed out on the cover and were visible through the clear polywrap that the magazines were sent out in.

Oh no, we thought, we don’t really want the address label visible on our custom cover! But Wallpaper* had thought of that…

Included in the polybag was a sticker to place over the address in order to make the magazine design exactly as we’d designed it. Clever!

Above – our self designed cover in the flesh. Below, two more copies that came to our office – although neither subscriber in these cases had actually designed their own cover. These ones were randomly generated to ensure each cover (whether designed by the subscriber or not) of the August issue is unique.

The user could even choose from a choice of nine Rolex ads to appear on the back cover…

Hats off to Wallpaper* for making this work. We only have two minor gripes – that the graphics on our cover have a rather nasty drop shadow that wasn’t visible when we did the original design and that the address label is still visible through the sticker, making it look a bit untidy. But, having looked into the logistics of doing this kind of thing ourselves, we know how difficult it will have been to pull off, so congrats to everyone involved.

To see the gallery of submitted user-designed covers, visit wallpaper.com/custom-covers/gallery#4714401.1

Getaway To Celebrity and Volcanic Hot Spot — Iceland’s Hótel Rangá!

imageImagine an Icelandic country lodge so cool, there’s not only horseback riding and bird-watching, but ATV tours and river rafting! How about so cool that even celebrities are known to frequent the Four Star hotel that’s not only green energy powered, but only uses hot water heated by actual nearby springs! But the coolest part about this Icelandic hotel is probably just the view of Mount Hekla and its oozing goo of fire, not to mention the Jeep-guided and helicopter tours of the active volcano. Actually, cool is truly synonymous with Hòtel Rangà for the subpolar climate. There’s nothing better to heat you up, though, than the outdoor hot-spring hot tubs, which happen to offer premiere seats for eruption sightings and glacier-action underneath a sky illuminated by the Northern Lights (best seen between September and April!). With views and activities abound, there’s always time to relax at a fine dining establishment situated beside a world ranked salmon river when not in your newly renovated room. Speaking of rooms, its 15 room collection of World Pavilion suites feature continent themed decor with authentically crafted furniture from each of the world’s 7 geographic regions. Regardless of the themed rooms, your cultural immersion within the host country trumps all, as the hotel sits right in the heart of southern Iceland’s most scenic adventure-land and most exciting cities. With celebrity sightings, adventure, and beauty galore, your stay at Hótel Rangá will be the trip of a lifetime! Checkout the slideshow for some of the sights that Hótel Rangá has in store!

view slideshow

THEKEY.TO

THEKEY.TO celebrates its third edition with the motto
ACCELERATION. This concept aims to provoke a new
perspective on green products. No longer ar..

Illustrated observations of Amsterdam life

Amsterdam isn’t quite like any other city in the world – something New Zealander Toby Morris quickly realised when he relocated to Amsterdam a couple of years ago to work at ad agency Wieden + Kennedy as a studio artist.

Enjoying seeing the behaviours and various quirky traits of the city’s inhabitants, Morris decided to document Amsterdam’s peculiarities each day in an illustrated journal. Now over 300 of his invariably humorous but keenly observed Amsterdamisms have been published in a new, A5 hardback book, Alledaags, A Year in Amsterdam (self published using ezbook.nl and priced at €30). Here are some of examples of the work inside…

 


Oops, a bike dangles by its lock from a bridge over a canal


Children and people with a weak constitution, please look away!


Looks like Spiderman’s really ‘let himself go’

To find out more about the book and to potentially purchase a copy, visit alledaags.bigcartel.com/product/alledaags-the-book

Please note – all the typed captions are mine – they don’t appear in the book!

 

Secret Stash

Un projet original “Secret Stash” par Yi-Ting Cheng afin de de dissimuler des objets dans nos lieux de travail. Les espaces cachés et les messages ont été conçus dans 8 objets tels qu’une planche, des lampes et des tasses. Une sorte de camouflage visuel, à découvrir en vidéo.



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Previously on Fubiz

Jean Nouvels Serpentine Pavilion Set to Open This Weekend, Receives Generally High Praise

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As we told you back in March, Jean Nouvel is the latest starchitect to land London’s Serpentine Pavilion. Now, after four months’ work constructing it, his temporary building is scheduled to be open to the public this weekend and thus far has been receiving mostly positive reviews from critics. The open-air building is surrounded on top and on various sides by a thick-yet-translucent material that can range from solid red to near a blood red, depending on the kind of light that’s hitting it (Dezeen has a great collection of the Pavilion’s official photos). The insides feature more red, with the floors, furniture and various fabrics mirroring the color of the walls and ceiling. Placed right in the center of all the greenery in Kensington Gardens, it sticks out like no other Pavilion before it (at certain angles, it also sort of looks a little like a Habitrail for people). The Evening Standard calls it “a very sociable, relaxed, pleasant place” and while the Guardian‘s Will Gompertz is a bit taken aback by all the redness messing up his vision, saying that being inside is “like being stuck in a deep wound,” he’s generally positive about the whole thing. The Telegraph‘s Ellis Woodman is the only critic we’ve read so far who has directly negative things to say. Woodman argues that Nouvel’s Pavilion is “a one-idea building” and that “it looks, to be blunt, like a back-of-an envelope sketch developed by an office junior” (we think that one might also be able to argue that Nouvel swiped the whole idea from James Turrell‘s work with color). The critic sees the Pavillion as the work of a formerly great architect’s continued slump and the Pavilion’s organizers stuck in their own rut of continuing to hire the biggest names in the business. We’ll leave it up to those of you who get to see the Pavilion in person to decide. So drop us a line if you swing by and let us know your thoughts. We’d love to hear them.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Wood Pavillion by Wing Yi Hui and Lap Ming Wong

Architecture students Wing Yi Hui and Lap Ming Wong of the Oslo School of Architecture and Design have completed a domed latticed pavilion as part of a performance-oriented design project. (more…)

Tom Hoops

Coup de coeur pour les travaux et les portraits de Tom Hoops. Ce photographe américain, reconnu notamment dans le monde de la mode et du photo-journalisme, porte un regard unique sur les humains et le monde qui l’entoure. Plus d’images dans le suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz