Friday, 27 August 2010

Charlie Harper Illustration

http://www.codex99.com/illustration/35.html
Charlie Harper illustration - saw in Brighton recently. Interesting...
highlighted address takes you to great information - with thanks to the creators of this

Friday, 16 July 2010

Website

Working with website designer Jason Watkins my website should soon be launched.
Exciting to bring together all parts of my work - to share.

Monday, 5 July 2010

Following on from Splenda.....Sweet and Lo (lovely name) have different designs on their individual serving sachets too.....was the Pink Panther for a while and yesterday I noticed different musical instruments....Nice attention to detail
A time way from the blog ....now some new thoughts.
Reading in Marketing Week this morning that Chambourd is to launch a new design for its bottle. Whilst the company identifies that consumers do not recognise the drink's name, I do feel that the bottle with its little decorative gold harness and kitsch-like box with regal overtones is a classic.
The new design is indeed more restrained and classy. I like it - but much prefer the glamorous, glitz of the old design. The drink is delicious and the overall package alwyas seems quite a present - the bottle with the lovely crown top too good to dispose of..hence my collection of the bottle tops.
Must get to Waitrose to buy up the old designs before they disappear...like the old Drambuie bottle that got a redesign recently too.

Friday, 14 May 2010

John Lewis television advertisement

The latest John Lewis advertisement.
Reportedly costing £6million ? Generated much media coverage and has provoked much criticism.
Comparisons have been made with the 2007 television advertisement by Italian lingerie company Calzedonia - and indeed the two advertisements do appear very similar.
Wish I'd never seen the John Lewis example.

Sunday, 9 May 2010

As a researcher and collector of all things flocked it was great to come across a range of Timpo flocked zoo animals yesterday. Dated to c.1956 these little fuzzy covered lead animals have seen better days as their fur coats are rubbed and the odd leg is bent. However, they stand as great examples of toys that were cleverly designed to appeal. The camel looks great in its fawn flock covering. Manufactured by Timpo these examples predate their plastic counterparts.

Splenda - artificial sugar. These little individual servings of sweetner offer witty comments on the sides of their packs. A variety of examples were found in a cafe's sugar bowl - Sweet and Lo have done the same too.
Clever to add a touch of type with a quick message to sweeten the pack too.

Friday, 7 May 2010

election

The Sun newspaper's front cover on election day has Cameron in Obama-style design.
Fairey's election/leader design has become a fast classic.

Cadbury's Milk Chocolate wrapper's text - official treat provider of London 2012 Olympics.
Treat provider rather than official sponsor = emotive language.

Thursday, 29 April 2010

brands

A clever short piece - award winning animated short

http://www.logorama-themovie.com/

Tuesday, 27 April 2010



Today's lion - the brand icon on a pack of Leo peas. What a great design - the pack communicates directly its contents. These ones were bought to grow rather than to eat. The bonus find of a lion is great ...a grumpy one but gives his name to the brand.

idN magazine


idN magazine - an interesting collection of creative talent. As the website states - an international network of designers.
The image is not from idN - it's a squashed sweet seen on the pavement in Stoke-On-Trent last summer - a colourful swirl.

Monday, 26 April 2010

Magically enduring: The magic tree

A design classic? Magic Tree air freshner - the little green card tree that hangs in cars to give a particular smell. When was this invented and by who? Are the vanilla yellow versions as good as the original pine; are the jazzy coloured alternatives as effective?
It's curious to see the shapes and colours of different air freshners designed to dangle in a car - almost toy like these apparently functional scent saturated, smell eminating designs are popular in taxis - and often a necessity.
In fact taxis often display some surprising designs - the dashboard ornaments; the family photographs...and the rather nasty seat covers that no doubt mask even nastier original seat surfaces below. The beaded seat covers.....
Back to the Magic Tree ...interesting name...enduring form.
Today's lion? The Times online - illustration.
just receieved an email 'Sent using Blackberry from Orange'.
Quite a fruit cocktail.

A slice of lemon ontop of a building in Toronto...

Sunday, 25 April 2010

a puzzle

Boscombe-based jigsaw company Victory - produced jigsaws for many years.
Plan to track some down - see what they are like. Hopefully some nice kitsch images...

Large England flag, Bournemouth


Bournemouth, Lansdowne - Christchurch Road. Apparently works on a key building are being screened by a very large St. George's flag. This huge flag is quite a surprise to come across - bold.

Friday, 23 April 2010

On Trial Logo by Jonathan Cleave

My On Trial National Teaching Fellowship project - creative role play using a mock trial approach - has finally secured a graphic identity. With great thanks to designer Jonathan Cleave, a final logo was created which displays the red and black dress of the gowns that the judges wear in the On Trial courtroom. The logo is copyright J. Cleave with sole use for NTF On Trial work. It's been a long time coming as different versions have been created, tried and tested.

Another lion...

A lion a day keeps me happy.
Each day I go big game hunting - attempting to track down a graphic lion. This is surprisingly easy as so many abound across our urban landscapes. They stand proud in cityscapes: logos and decorative emblems across a myriad of contexts. Each day I record a new one - photographed and noted - adding to my visual collection - a graphic pride; a design cliche; a popular motif.
For me it's the Lion Rampant that's strong - the crowned lion another nice type.
The image of the lion on UK eggs, stamped in red, presents a symbol of quality - it provides reassurance. A trusted guardian...

A sports logo and slogan. 'Bring it on' - a motivational call to compete with Nike's 'Just Do It.' This image came as a swing ticket with a watch.

planner/diary - managing time and work

Time management, planning, organisation - keeping commitments and responsibilities logged and controlled- is important in days filled with different activities. I've used a variety of different diary systems - traditional and digital - and always seem to come back to one favourite method: a physical A5 week to a view paper diary/planner.
Throughout my academic studies and professional work I've kept a diary of daily events ...teaching schedules, important meetings, deadlines, spending, contacts etc which have been penned, stapled and glued into the paper pages of a diary. I've kept all my diaries - although some years I'd rather never revisit again. They are all stored - lined up and available should I need to cross reference something from the past - quickly. Doodles on pages often suggest how I felt at a certain time...biro marks that have been added as particular prompts or playful lines to circle round specific points.
The academic year diary shapes my year and accompanies me everywhere. It's often the first thing I look at in the morning and no one day escapes without significant scribbled entries. The diaries document my work and their forms are extended with additional papers, secured with rubber band and bulldog clips, which leave the diary bulging at the end of a year. Coloured sticky notes decorate the pages - layers of square messages to myself that I want to ensure I action. Their ticked off forms provide satisfying record of completion and achievement. The pleasure of starting a clean, flat new diary offers a delicious start to the new academic year.
I've tried various Filofax forms: small, A5 and bigger ...leather, cloth and zipped versions ..they've been good but may be a little too precious for me. The ring binder system works effectively and the additional inserts - maps , rulers etc are satisfying to purchase - but my preference is for another type.
I love a Quo Vadis Principal A5 academic year Agenda Planning Diary- especially the red leatherette cover one , although the blue wasn't bad. Here I've found what I consider to be the best diary. The smooth, quality paper that sits flat when open and doesn't let ink/ballpoint/pencil show through on the next page, offers real luxury. The feel of the paper is great and makes writing pleasurable. The perforated corners help quickly locate which week I'm in and where in the dairy I am. The detachable address book is great and the maps offer valuable reference points - and entertaining distraction on occassion.
Originally designed in 1954 Quo Vadis examples have been more readily available in the UK in recent years. I bought my first one in Canada some years ago and have stuck with them since.
Although working with a Canadian example meant the UK bank holidays were not readily entered, which on occassion I overlooked, overall my first use of the Quo Vadis Principal was so great I don't think I'd change now.
Over the years I've sectionalised work into different diaries - separate diaries for key projects; a small one for my handbag - but I keep my big red diary as the central log. It's this one that operates as the nerve centre for my work. This year I purchased a lovely square pink Quo Vadis - the Executive 2010 - 13 month (16x16cm). This feels great..the square format so pleasurable to work with - makes work feel that little bit better - a decadent functional diary that just feels good.
Computer, mobile and i-phone apps diary types have their uses....and I use these too but not to the same extent as a paper diary. But perhaps I'm old-school when it comes to a diary. I like the feel of the pen on paper; I love the physical weight of a diary; the ease of its use where I don't need to charge a battery. I like writing with a pen (preferably a black Bic biro) when organising my work...

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

Presentation Skills for Students . 2nd edition
Joan van Emden and Lucinda Becker . 2010. Palgrave Macmillan Publishers Limited

Monday, 19 April 2010

Quality Street sweet tin - when did the lady and gentleman disappear from the brand's design? The elegant characters featured on the tin's design for years... classic images that immediately identified this particular make.
The colourful cellophane wrappers of such confectionery sparkled like tempting jewels ..the heaviness of the tin confirming a tempting treat.
Bring back the couple?
Image courtesy of MoDiP (Museum of Design in Plastic at the Arts University College at Bournemouth, Dorset, UK)

What's particularly amazing is this is a jeans label for a brand for sale - hanging in a market in Hinckley, Leicestershire c. 1995 - where the label was really eye catching. With nothing really to do with the brand or the jeans, the use of a bit of sci-fi design on a large card label with the screaming Amazing added a bit of wow. The jeans had a variety of comparable labels too....worth keeping.

Sunday, 18 April 2010


The Bic pen - transparent barrel pen that writes so well for ages. Cheap, comfortable and so good to write with. Despite so many pens over the years with miles of writing, the Bic pen is always the favourite for long haul work. Whilst the cap is usually lost and the pen end often chewed, the actually ink flow and weight of the pen still suits ....a classic.

The little Bic man is also a beaut design - the silent sentry who has the shiny ballpoint head.
Across the internet sites showcase much work in illustration done with ballpens. Is it true that Bic invites customers to completely use a ballpoint? How many letters will a Bic write I wonder..

designobserver

10 Things That Need To Be Redesigned by Jessica Helfand - article 2008 www.designobserver.com
From lottery cards to political lawn signs this top 10 suggests some interesting examples where design could be improved. I quite like the overt tackiness of some lottery cards - interesting as they change with culture; time of year, popular culture and classic good luck symbols that are used.
Other things that could do with a redesign....the pouring mechanisms on some fruit juice cartons...

Curious about Curious Boym


Just ordered Curious Boym on Amazon.
(Image from Amazon)
By Constantin Boym - curious creative designs apparently.
The design company:
www.boym.com

Friday, 16 April 2010


Kastrup Chair by Hans J Wegner - vinyl upholstery, steel legs.

useful sources

Keeping up to date with developments across the media and design:
Marketing by Brandrepublic.com - weekly news - chunks of updates
Campaign published by Haymarket - weekly

NME redesign

A publication that we perhaps grow up with and away from - the New Musical Express - the NME. First published in 1952 the popular music publication has charted developments in music for many generations. http://www.nme.com/home
Apparently owing to declining sales the NME has been recently redesigned. The on-line NME curently has an interesting article on the 20 most valuable album covers ever.

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

The Laughing Cow


A classic logo - the laughing cow- borrowed and used in an advertisement in Toronto.

Signs ....and ghostsigns

A laundrette Dry Cleaning sign in Stoke on Trent - jazzy type and wonderfully dated. But still functional. One of the many signs seen on a daily basis across the highstreet.

April's edition of Creative Review magazine has an interesting article on Ghostsigns. The notion of faded advertising signs, hand painted on the sides of buildings - often advertisements from the past that still remain long after the shop or product has disappeared.

Ghostsigns often appear in towns and cities - the collection in the Creative Review Monograph publication are from the History of Advertsing Trust collections. (HAT collection is the great resource based in Norfolk). Discovering ghostsigns (lovely term) in derelict areas of cities is quite a surprise - amazing how many still abound.

Tuesday, 13 April 2010



Proud lions in Brighton. The two lions, rampant, help mark the time of day. Striding, tails aloft, stern eyes but ever powerful.


A makers stamp on a red brick on a wall in Southbourne, Dorset.
The regal face circled with the manufacturer's name makes surprisingly decorative a common brick.

Framework for design principles

'Created by the AIGA Center for Sustainable Design (CFSD), the Living Principles for Design were born out of the design profession’s need for an aspirational and actionable framework for integrated sustainability—a common point of reference to which all designers can refer. Its ongoing development is dependent on the contributions of the design community at large. Conceived and developed over the summer of 2009, the Living Principles were officially unveiled at the AIGA Design Conference in Memphis on October 9, 2009.'
http://www.aiga.org/content.cfm/the-living-principles-for-design
see the Manifesto: http://www.aiga.org/resources/content/7/3/1/2/documents/AIGA_The_Living_Principles_Framework.pdf

Jonathan Klein: Photos that changed the world | Video on TED.com

Jonathan Klein: Photos that changed the world Video on TED.com
TED - presents Jonathan Klein talking about key powerful photographs that changed the world.
Images of our world that are iconic and challenging.

Photographs do more than document history -- they make it. Jonathan Klein shows some of the most iconic photos of our age, and talks about the impact of images so powerful

Monday, 12 April 2010

A sunny walk and keeping eyes peeled for unusual things. This design - a settling pigeon ontop of a post outside an old hotel - almost looked real.
Trays of printed materials as seen in a printers retail shop in Southsea, Hampshire. Calligraphic attention given to naming each drawer. Click on the image to get a better view.

Fuit box graphics











Lovely fruit box graphics photographed in Cardiff. The Apollo brand complete, with astronaut and planet, is a great example of creative design that gives identity and personality to fruit. This example and the wooden cherry box for Cerezas are bright designs left discraded when all the produce is sold. Too good to see binned, the cherry example was rescued - saved for use as a set of trays.

Sunday, 11 April 2010


The Milkman - a jigsaw from the People who work for us ( No.6) puzzle range c.1961 produced by Philograph Publications Limited, London.
The range included almost Janet and John style illustrations of key jobs including the road sign worker who paints the white line down the middle of the road.
The square card jigsaws, used as educational tools, have an appealing aesthetic.
Interestingly they capture roles that increasingly become less evident in today's culture. Yes, milkmen still appear - the gentle hum of their vans can often be heard early morning - but their prescence is perhaps less evident. The chink of the glass milk bottles, the bottle carriers on the front doorstep, the trust that no one will tamper with, let alone take your foil topped bottles (where you could see the cream at the top of the milk), have almost become fond memories - easily forgotten.
The design of the Christmas foil tops often had holly motifs on - a nice seasonal touch. The small milk bottles at mid-morning break at primary schools - the privilege of being selected as milk monitor.
The glass bottles with printed advertisements - that were collected.
Makes you think....milk to the home without carrying cardboard cartons or 2 litre plastic bottles....a luxury or are things really now more convenient to be your own milkman?

Woman's Own magazine- first published in 1932. The 9th May 1959 cover (image courtesy of http://www.20th-century-colectables.com/ ) indicates content type that includes gardening, fashion and knitting. By comparison the current copy of Woman's Own (12 April 2010) indicates a content of celebrity 'news', food and diets. The design uses the recent trend of type in bright, fluorescent colours, bold headings and tabloid-style photographs - similar approach to that evidenced in competing publications Now, Closer etc - a magazine cover style that shouts. The content attempts to lure readers and anchor their interests in celebrity media culture.
An interesting consideration of Woman's Own attempt to speak in an online-interactive way is presented by Mark Bellam (Internet Consultant and Information Architect) at http://www.currybet.net/

Thursday, 8 April 2010

www.creativity-online.com

creativity-online.com by Crain Communications = rich range of examples from creative culture - advertsing etc. The Top 50 most creative and inspiring thinkers and doers list provides useful reference. The advertisement examples are entertaining - lots to see that otherwise would be difficult to access.

Wednesday, 7 April 2010

The Little Know-It-All

A compact useful source. The Little Know-It-All : Common Sense for Designers by editors Klanten, Misclher and Biltz, 2007, published by Die Gestalten Verlag. Offers useful information regarding fundamental aspects of design. The little book covers information relating to colour theories; perspective; signs and symbols; layout; creative techniques; printing; webdesign and copyright...etc..etc
A useful introductory source for quick reference for students.
(The front cover image brings back memories of Frank Sidebottom?)

Krazy about K - article by Phil Patton, AIGA 2008


The Krazy about K article by Phil Patton (AIGA, 16 December 2008) offers a lively consideration of the delights of this letter. K is considered in its various forms - and its use in classic logo designs such as Kodak and Krispy Kreme. After reading through Patton's piece Ks appear to be kicking out all over the place. K tends to be one of those letters that you end up doodling...that an a lower case e.

The Jonny Cash Project

The Johnny Cash Project - a global collaborative creative project that celebrates the work of the great Johnny Cash. Participants are invited to contribute to the webiste - adding creative work to Cash's final song.
www.thejohnnycashproject.com

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

Ogily advertsing agency (Brazil) - hidden cameras take photographs of customers which are then printed on the wrappers of their burgers....big burger is watching.

On Trial learning and teaching

On Trial is a key learning and teaching project I've developed with BA(Hons) Graphic Design students at the Arts University College at Bournemouth, UK. Over the years the first year students engage in lively role play and creative debate of a key issue or problem through the vehicle of the mock trial. Each year students take ownership of their activities to produce challenging consideration of an issue relevant to their specialism. We borrow from our legal and medical colleagues use of the moot and mock trial and take liberally the influence of popular film and televsion programmes that have utilised the court as a an arena for drama.

Doors of Perception website : www.doorsofperception.com by John Thackara.
Sustainable futures......projects, ideas

Sunday, 4 April 2010

Developing students as critical thinkers.
An interesting source: produced by University of Leicester - by Stu johnson
www.le.ac.uk/studentdevelopment
http://screenr.com/WX7
Considering different presentation approaches.....
PechaKucha 20x20 - the show of 20 images for 20 seconds each where discussion is concise
Format created by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham of Klein Dytham architecture.
see: www.pecha-kucha.org the website has case study examples.

Saturday, 3 April 2010

a bit of colour


Grey skies today..and black and white text tonight...so a bit of colour doesn't go a miss.

Friday, 2 April 2010

Surely one of the best places to work...seat space permitting. The quiet confines of an intercity long distance train journey has to be one of the most effective places to address certain types of work - reading, writing....Throughout the years the Virgin train journey from the south coast to the Midlands and north has ensured many happy hours of undisturbed, relatively comfortable work. In recent years the additional benefits of the power point/electric socket on the window seat side has enabled even greater work to be done. Evening journeys provide the best train time ...less people, more space and dark views from the window limit distractions. A pack of cheese and onion crisps and an onboard hot chocolate and the work flows fast..
A nice surprise- Milka Easter eggs in the brand colour of purple. 4 egg-size chocolate eggs complete with 2 miniature spoons - packed in a cardboard egg box. Lovely...

Friday, 12 March 2010

Do Good Design

The original First Things First Manifesto (1964) by Ken Garland fairly gets you thinking. Likewise the recently published book Do Good Design by David Berman (2009) AIGA offers very interseing food for thought.
http://www.davidberman.com/social/dogood.php

Saturday, 6 March 2010

resource- colourful

thedieline.com
a great collection of news and examples relating to packaging design. The Marmite special edition black bottle is an interesting example.. The image below ...range of matchbox designs

ceativity

An interesting article in Campaign 26 February 2010. Has You Tube changed creativity? by Noel Bussey (p. 17). Certainly some inspirational material available to view.

Wednesday, 3 March 2010

On Trial 1 March 2010


Monday's On Trial with BA(Hons) Graphic Design first year students....wow.
The quality of debate was strong - notion of quotation in graphic design ...some clever thinking and some superb body language. Lucy's photographs captured the spirit of the event very effectively. The images evidence how hands played their part in the communication arena.
Thanks go to all involved - commendable work.

Student Volunteering work

The recent event that showcased AUCB students' volunteering work was quite an eye opener...students are undertaking a range of work across a variety of very challenging contexts.
Their committment to support others is commendable and opportunities available are diverse. The Creative Interventions Project that investigates such work is revealing interesting case studies.
Emails received throughout the day reveal how some students appear to be thinking of assignment work at very different times of the day...and night.
With i-phones there come more emails. The ease of tapping in queries appears to have quickened communication and the expectation perhaps of faster and faster response.
So many channels of communication - the odd message received via Facebook rather than through the formal university email system...interesting to see where some work from.