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We’ve now done three issues with the redesign – time to take stock…

Now that the shock of the new has died down and we have had time to make some of the minor adjustments that all redesigns need as they are bedding in, we wanted to check back and see how readers are feeling about the magazine.

In the original blog post announcing the redesign, a lot of people were responding to images rather than the magazine itself which, at that point, they hadn’t yet seen. Nevertheless, we were very encouraged by the reaction – especially given the somewhat, shall we say, feisty nature of blog comments generally and blog comments about anything involving new logos in particular.

What was also interesting was the divergence between the blog comments – which were about a third wholly positive, third positive with some reservations and third negative – with the comments that began to come in the next day via Twitter. Possibly because Twitter is not anonymous, but more because those Tweeting had actually got a copy of the magazine in front of them, the Twitter comments were far more positive – 90% so.

We’ve now had the full gamut, from that old favourite “epic fail’ to calls for the May cover to get a Black Pencil at D&AD next year, from “that’s fucking horrible” to “I love it. It feels intelligent and like something of value. It no longer feels like an industry magazine, it feels like a serious (but playful) arts journal rich with commentary and critique.” (We liked that last one, of course).

With redesigns, and especially rebrands, it’s very rare to hear anything of the goals of the project. Commenters are left with nothing but form, which invites simplistic responses, whether positive or negative. Here then, briefly, is some of what we were hoping to do with the CR redesign:

1, Make the magazine a better physical product. Make the most of it being in print, better paper, a better format. Make it something of value, something worth keeping. Give print a chance. And if we could do that it would help us…

2, Turn the spotlight back on to the magazine. The website is fantastic and helps us in all kinds of ways. Traffic has gone up fourfold in a year. We wanted to reclaim some of the enthusiasm with which the site is received for the printed magazine which was feeling overshadowed. We wanted to get it talked about again.

3, Signal the change at CR editorially. Some 18 months ago we changed the focus of the magazine to be more opinionated and less of a showcase, to be less just ‘here’s a new piece of work’ (which the website can do far better) to ‘what do you think of this work and what it means?’ To be more challenging. We needed to make people realise that there had been a change of direction and get those who hadn’t picked up the magazine for a while to do so.

Finally, a word about the logo which, of course, was always going to be the most contentious issue. As stated above, we needed to signal that change had taken place and to express a new stance, which would have been difficult if we hadn’t changed the logo. In fact, I’m sure we would have been slammed for wasting an opportunity if we hadn’t changed.

We wanted to write the name out, we wanted newsstand presence, we wanted to be distinctive and invite a response and not be yet another bit of polite sans serif with nothing to say, and we wanted something that, on the website, reminded visitors that there is a printed magazine at the heart of all we do. And, no, we don’t expect it to last 30 years – we’ve had six changes of logo in the past 30, so I expect we’ll have a few more in the next three decades.

Of course we wanted to make a magazine that looks good, but this redesign is about addressing some very significant issues for the magazine, some of which are outined above. We won’t know if it has ‘worked’ or not for 6, even 12 months, if then. The May issue sold out in some stores (the first time that has happened in about four years) so it seems that we may be on the right track, but there’s a long way to go.

Add to that the fact that we just had a new record month for traffic online and the Illustration Annual attracted way more entries than we budgeted for and it seems people like what we are doing.

The redesign has created an opportunity for us, now it’s up to all of us at CR to make the most of it.

 

Dogs on Design: At the Dog Park with Khoi Vinh and Mr. President

pimg alt=”IMG_2688.JPG” src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/assets_c/2010/05/IMG_2688-thumb-468×312-4331.jpg” width=”468″ height=”312″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pemIn this post, our second in the series a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/dogs_on_design_raleigh_pop_interviews_russell_flinchum_16110.asp”Dogs on Design/a, design critic and dog owner Sarah F. Cox met with Design Director of a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/”NYTimes.com/a, Khoi Vinh, to walk his dog while discussing the ever-changing business of design at the Times. Sarah’s dog Raleigh, was disappointed to be left at home to work on her blog, a href=”http://raleighpop.wordpress.com/”Raleigh Pop/a.br /
/em/p

pIt’s 8:15 on an April Saturday morning. A bespectacled, lanky man with black hair in jeans and a jacket trails his dog down the path from the parking lot to the central grassy area of Prospect Park in Brooklyn, NY. Every day before 9:00 am dogs are allowed off leash, and no matter the pack-leader dynamics at home, it is the time of day that dogs lead and humans follow. In this case, it is a black lab mix that is dragging the Design Director of a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/”NYTimes.com/a./p

pKhoi Vinh and his dog, Mr. President, have been together since December 2002, when Khoi brought him home from the Newark Humane Society in New Jersey. Selected because he was not barking like the other shelter dogs, even today Mr. President displays a calm self-assuredness that fits with his name, picked out prior to his adoption. The sleek all-black dog has been known to shun affection and may seem a bit haughty or self-important. But these days, his owner is appreciating that he isn’t needy; Khoi has a new human baby at home vying for his attention. At seven years old, Mr. President is often cat-like, content to sit on the couch and watch the humans. /p

pimg alt=”Picture 17.png” src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/assets_c/2010/05/Picture 17-thumb-468×308-4343.png” width=”468″ height=”308″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pOn this early morning walk, it’s apparent that Khoi is still adjusting to the interrupted nights of new parenthood. Coupled with the demands of the job, Khoi certainly has a lot on his mind, but he doesn’t volunteer it. As his friend for over six years, design writer a href=”http://www.printmag.com/dailyheller/”Steven Heller/a told me, “Khoi is a man of no wasted words.” You might say he is efficient with them, and it is this efficiency that is needed on the job./p

pimg alt=”Picture 16.png” src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/assets_c/2010/05/Picture 16-thumb-468×309-4341.png” width=”468″ height=”309″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pFor a man spending his days in the Renzo Piano-designed Times headquarters, time does not run on a news cycle. Unlike a paper’s art director, Khoi works on the platform of the website and its long-term enhancements. As he explains, “My job is not to design. It is to create the conditions under which good design happens,” meaning that he goes to a lot of meetings. He became Design Director in 2006, and while he began his career as a graphic designer for print, he’s been web-focused since 1998, the year he moved to New York. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/business/_dogs_on_design_at_the_dog_park_with_khoi_vinh_and_mr_president_16622.asp”(more…)/a
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Dell is seeking a Senior Interactive Designer in Austin, TX

pa href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/jobs_browse.asp” border=”0″img alt=”coroflot_design_jobs.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/coroflot_design_jobs.jpg”/ /a/p

pstronga href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/job_details.asp?job_id=26634referral=C77blogpost”Senior Interactive Designer/a
brDell/strongbr /Austin, TX/p

pUnder the guidance of Art Directors and the Creative Director, the Senior Interactive Designer will work across a wide range of interactive design projects that meet both user and business objectives while maintaining the Dell brand. In addition, you will work closely with information architects, account managers and business stakeholders to achieve the design objectives for each concept. Not to mention you get to work with a passionate team who knows how to have fun and balance both their work and personal life. Sound interesting?/p

pa href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/job_details.asp?job_id=26634referral=C77blogpost”raquo; view/a/p

pemThe best design jobs and portfolios hang out at a href=”http://coroflot.com”Coroflot/a./em/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/dell_is_seeking_a_senior_interactive_designer_in_austin_tx__16630.asp”(more…)/a
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Unitasker Wednesday: The Cherry Chomper Cherry Pitter

All Unitasker Wednesday posts are jokes — we don’t want you to buy these items, we want you to laugh at their ridiculousness. Enjoy!

I’m not a huge fan of cherries (unless they’re candied and in the middle of a giant dollop of chocolate), so I don’t own a cherry pitter. However, if you’re a fan of cherries, I hear the workhorse cherry pitter can be a small and useful single-task device (similar to a garlic press).

Reader Alison has introduced us to a very specific type of cherry pitter that is the opposite of small, looks extremely difficult to clean, and doesn’t appear to be nearly as efficient as its traditional competitor — and definitely crosses the line from single-task device into unitasker territory. The Cherry Chomper Cherry Pitter:

One of the reviews on Amazon is titled: “A Messy Waste of Time — Works Like it’s Part of the Federal Government.” I don’t know if that headline is accurate, but it certainly made me laugh.

Thanks, Alison, for bringing this big head Cherry Chomper unitasker to our attention!


SUSI Store

Nel cuore di Latina, dal lontano 1974 sorge quello che è tutt’oggi considerato come uno tra i migliori fashion store in Italia: SUSI. Nel corso degli anni, SUSI non ha mai perso la passione per la ricerca e la scoperta di nuove tendenze nel mondo della moda internazionale, cercando di divulgare brands emergenti accanto a quelli più consolidati nazionali e internazionali.
Lo store da poco ristrutturato con gusto ‘pure white’ e minimalista, si suddivide in due piani man/woman per più di 1000mq di esposizione.
Susi store lo trovate anche online.

SUSI STORE
susistore.it
shoponline.susistore.it
info@susistore.it

Viale Umberto I – LATINA (ITALY)
ph. +39 (0)773 693994

Mon 16.30 – 20.00
Tue – Sat 9.30 – 13.00 16.30 – 20.00
Sun 16.30 – 20.00

SUSI Store

SUSI Store

SUSI Store

SUSI Store

SUSI Store

V30 Freitag Skid

Questo sistema di scaffali modulari, è stato progettato dal designer Colin Schaelli per Freitag. Composte al 100% di plastica riciclata, verranno molto presto riempite delle loro famose borse.

Featured Stockist: Orange Beautiful

Paul Blow

Lui è Paul Blow.
[Via]

Paul Blow

Eli Broad Trims List to Two Architects, Piques Nicolai Ouroussoffs Interest

1120broad.jpg

Say what you will about Eli Broad, the man knows how to build tension and generate some press. After what seems like decades of talk about his new museum and where it’s going to go, pitting architects and whole cities against one another in the process, it feels like we’re very nearly there in getting some solid facts out of the teasing billionaire. The LA Times have broken the story that Broad has selected two finalists to design the new museum, meaning it’s now Rem Koolhaas vs. Diller, Scofidio & Renfro in the last lap to land the gig. And since they were both tasked to create something based on Los Angeles’ Grand Avenue Project space, it also seems likely a decision about location has finally been made. Although we’re nearing the end, all of this buzz over the past bazillion years was even enough for the NY Times‘ resident critic Nicolai Ouroussoff to brave the elements and talk about something happening on the competing coast. Besides presenting some interesting details here and there about Grand Avenue and the architects-in-waiting’s plans, there’s nothing we haven’t been reading since the beginning of time since this Broad first announced his plans back in, well, November of 2008. Ah, how young we all were back then. Good times.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Hi-Fido

Questo cane-speaker che prende il nome di Hi-Fido, è stato disegnato da Matteo Cibic…non so perchè ma lo metterei volentieri sulla mia desk!
[Via]

Hi-Fido