Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Puma scores

Puma trainers are a classic kind of high. The reusable bag as part of the box is the extra kick.














































65% less paper = approximately 8,500 tons less paper will be consumed, 20 million Megajoules of electricity saved, 1 million litres less of fuel oil used and 1 million litres of water saved. During transport 500,000 litres of diesel is saved and lastly, due to the replacement of traditional shopping bags with the lighter built-in bag the difference in weight can save up to 275 tons of plastic.

Reference:
http://www.chloregy.com/home/resources-energy-a-tech/127499-pumas-new-packaging-and-distribution-system-to-save-more-than-60-of-paper-and-water-annually-ppc

Friday, 9 April 2010

Atari(ing) New York city

Brilliant high!


Boom!
















More @ Inges Idee !

Tuesday, 6 April 2010


New


Don t like it. And seriously don't understand the reason to spend money to design something so robotic for a soft drink. I prefer the more organic of this very old one without the awkward frame around the type. 

Thursday, 25 February 2010

Getting very high - Everything to create everything.

Following the lead of the post of yesterday a little more of creative use of materials. The first, a campaign created by a Canadian agency, for DeSerres, apparently a shop for art materials. The latter, Aggravure, work of french artist Baptiste Debombourg.

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Wednesday, 24 February 2010

Getting very high - The future is yesterday

I guess in ten years time someone will be using memory sticks and dvds for something similar. This is the work of Nick Gentry.

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Friday, 19 February 2010

Nothing is created, everything is reinvented. Is it?

Today I was reading about one more accusation of plagiarism involving Harry Potter and his mother, J. K. Rowling. Apparently someone else trying to hitchhike the super-power brand that the narrative has become ever since its launch. This time, she is the one being accused of plagiarism. Well, I confess I have never read the books or watched the films what, I guess, will sound as blasphemy for some, especially here in the UK.

Anyway, the real truth is that I also was reading  a post published on CR Magazine blog regarding the Constructivism Movement and its influence in the visual, in special, Graphic Design. The article is actually debating the endurance of the influence of such visual language along the years up to to present; questioning its appeal as a visual language in itself, detached from the political views associated to its origins.

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Rodchenko photomontage,1924. She says: 'Books'

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Franz Ferdinand album 'You Can Have It So Much Better'

As a former graphic design student it is very easy to understand the reasons why the movement is so intrinsic to the practice: on studying design, you train yourself to see everything around you in geometric shapes, 'deconstructing' everything to their basic forms. And those basic shapes are in the end the skeleton of a traditional graphic piece - grids, rules, shaped backgrounds. Any hue, images and typography  — the organs and skin — tend to turn into chaos without the underneath structure. Obviously there are the practitioners of the antithesis of the movement, aka David Carson.

The question is:  Do the images posted above (originally posted on the CR post) illustrate the influence of the movement on current graphic pieces or do they illustrate one of the greatest debates in the creative world: plagiarism. It is quite clear that the second designer 'inspired' his work on the first one. However I guess the album cover does not mean to bring the same political appeal of the Russian poster. Given the title of the album, can we take as an excuse the use of a certain irony? And if so, at what point is this irony clever?

And then I started questioning myself: all my posts are triggered by things I see and read around. I am scanning and browsing things all the time and my brain goes around working as a sponge. At certain point it starts making connections among all these things and there I go, a post. Am I being unethical at some point?






 

Thursday, 18 February 2010

Oktavilla

Is a design agency from Sweden specialized in "functional design" for newspapers and websites. They develop concepts, structures and formats to make those medias easier and more fun. And with magazines, they make walls.

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Wednesday, 17 February 2010

From the things I want to do when I grow up

Lots of people have personal projects. Lots of designers work in non-commissioned projects for the simply pleasure of being designing and creating. One of my personal projects is to design posters for my favorite tracks of all times. There are album covers, there are video clips and, nothing beats the power of the sound; but having Star Guitar or  Desired Constellation illustrating the walls of my flat would be a plus and having a song framed on still canvas is a completely different challenge than making use of moving image.

A group of designers and photographers were invited to visualize the tracks of the first album of Heaven 17. Heaven 17 is a British band from the infamous 80's that I just got to know about the existence in the mid 90's. And because of a film. They play one of my favorite tracks in the Trainspotting soundtrack: Temptation. The song led me to get to know the rest of their work and now, 15 years on, I am very curious to see the results of the designers interpretation that I guess will be above all, very graphic.

The band will perform commemorative gigs and the visualizations will serve as backdrop during the tracks execution. The artists (photographers are also taking part) announced to be working with pure animation, lights and, as expected, typography.