Progress print for Obama campaign

October 3, 2008

I recently discovered this beautiful poster and just had to share. This print was created earlier this year by Scott Hansen (aka ISO50 target=”_blank”), whose inspiring work is rich and luxurious in both color and detail. He was contacted by the Obama campaign and commissioned to create a poster on the theme of “Progress”. The poster was produced in a limited quantity of 5000 prints, and sold as a campaign fundraiser. Not surprisingly, it sold out quickly.

Hansen shares some behind-the-scenes insight regarding the Making of the Obama Print on his blog.

Above: A screenshot from the artist’s article mentioned above, showing a closer view and revealing some of the wonderful detail within the design


Poster for 2008 Breakers Marathon

September 30, 2008

Originally designed in 1-color as a t-shirt design, then adapted for a poster (18″ x 24″) for the 2008 Amica Insurance Breakers Marathon.


Typography fun for a cause: Part III

August 21, 2008

AUTHOR’S NOTE: If I were asked to restrict this blog to just one post, I think it would be this one.

Support Stem Cell Research Bumper Sticker

Stem Cell Research Bumper Sticker

Available as a bumper sticker (10″ x 3″) or a T-shirt.

As the title of this blog entry suggests, I find type design to be fun. This particular use of typography might also be the most important design I have ever created.

A personal connection

Stem cell research has the potential to impact many diseases and injuries, including diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, autoimmune disease, blood diseases, leukemia, severe burns, spinal injuries, and many more. In fact, it is estimated that stem cell research has the potential to help over 100 million Americans who suffer from these and other diseases and injuries.

Among those 100 million lives is the one that is at the center of my world. It is the life of Lisa —my beautiful wife and my hero— a life which includes Type 1 diabetes and its many complications. My support for stem cell research is rooted in my love for Lisa and my desire to help others avoid the endless struggles she bravely faces in her fight against this disease.

Want to learn more about stem cell research?

Stem cell research, while a controversial issue, is also one of today’s most misunderstood issues. Regardless of one’s position or beliefs, information, and the sharing of that information, is critical to improving understanding. A great place to start is tellmeaboutstemcells.org.


Flock printing: “This is the air we breathe”

August 20, 2008

While conducting some research for a project several months ago, I came across the interesting work of Jenny Bergström, a designer and researcher in Stockholm. I was particularly intrigued by her 2007 research project entitled “This is the air we breathe…”, in which she uses a flock printing technique to display air pollution over time in an urban environment.

billboard revealing pollution via flock printing

billboard revealing pollution via flock printing

You can view the progression of air pollution being revealed on this sign over time at Bergström’s website.

An excerpt from her website:

This is the air we breathe… provides instant feedback on our actions in the city. By using a technique for printing called ‘flock’ a dirt absorbing text or pattern can be printed on a less dirt absorbing surface and create a slow but direct response on pollution. People passing every day by car will be reminded of how they effect the urban environment.
In the city we are used to being approached by information from almost all directions. The commercialised urban environment consists of messages, constantly fighting for our attention, loud and/or with rapidly moving images. This is the air we breathe… uses another method in order to communicate. It demands time from the receiver and it does not deliver a straight answer.

Her website also contains an interesting and thought-provoking research paper entitled “Fear & Design”, (available as a PDF file) It investigates “how design can work with or against fear”, and “raises questions about fear and how rules about fear can be used in the design process”.


The power of one pixel

July 16, 2008

population one

Going through some older bookmarks, I re-discovered this little gem created by Ben Mautner of Wider Angle:

Population One: One Pixel is One Person

While I’m ordinarily not a fan of web pages requiring horizontal scrolling, I found this to be a terrific application for this otherwise frustrating task. In fact, in this case, I found the very act of scrolling (…and scrolling…) to the right to be integral to the delivery of the message. For me, it helped convey the enormity of 6.5 billion - the Earth’s population (current estimate, U.S. Census Bureau).

A simple, yet unique design, providing a powerful and humbling experience…and a reminder to make the most of my pixel.


Typography fun for a cause: Part II

June 10, 2008

Tour de Cure postcard

Above: The front of our fundraising postcard for our participation in this year’s Tour de Cure. (Hey, did you know they typically don’t remove the “old organs” when you receive an organ transplant? And did you know that plural of pancreas is pancreata?)

Background

Since 2000, Lisa and I have been cycling in the American Diabetes Association’s Tour de Cure fund-raising event. We’ve ridden in the MA and NH events, and this year we’re riding in 100 kilometer event in southern Maine for the first time.

We look forward to this annual event because it combines our efforts in the fight against diabetes with our love of cycling (and each other!). Each year, as we humbly request donations to the ADA as part of our participation in the event, we are also reminded of how fortunate we are to have so many supportive and generous friends and family members.

If you’d like to support our efforts this year, you can make a tax-deductible donation via our personal page on the event’s website. Or, just as appreciated, drop us a note via the comment link below with any well-wishes or good vibes. Thanks!

-Rob


Peace button

June 3, 2008

peace button

Above: A button I recently designed for the Sacred Heart Peace Community in Camden, New Jersey — the poorest city in the US, twice declared “America’s Most Dangerous City” (2004, 2005, Morgan Quitno Corp.), and least of all, the city where I was born.

The Sacred Heart Peace Community is a volunteer group that includes my Mom and was formed in 2002 “to stand on the side of life with all the struggling people of Camden and of the world” and to create opportunities for local residents to “participate in resistance to war and all forms of violence.”

Peace to Camden and the world.

- Rob

Looking for anti-war graphics?:
For many more anti-war graphics, created by designers and artists from around the world, check out www.anti-war.us, a site “dedicated to the free distribution of anti-war graphic material”. All designs on the site are “created voluntarily and distributed free to activists around the world.”


From wheels to wind to wireless: my pedal-powered cell phone

May 16, 2008

Please forgive two bicycle-related posts in a row, but today is National Bike to Work Day, and I just couldn’t help myself. For regular bike commuters like myself, the value in the actual riding today is perhaps outweighed by the attention today’s event might bring to a the idea of transportation by bicycle, and the potential for it to convince someone new to give it a try - whether to work, errands, the gym, or wherever.

hauling by bike
Not me, but I’ve definitely felt like this guy on more than a few rides.

It was great to see the event get some publicity from the mainstream media, including a mention on my local (Boston) morning news this morning, as part of Bay State Bike Week. It was also great to see an article today in the WIRED Magazine’s popular blog… 5 Ways To Make Bike Commuting Easy. I enjoyed the article, as well as its terrific images (example above), and thought the author did a great job of blending the simple joys & practicalities of cycling with some fun & useful new technology, managing to bring the topic of bike commuting to its many gadget-oriented readers.

Speaking of bikes and gadgets, I’d like to take this opportunity to share one of my favorite new pieces of work-related equipment. For my last birthday, Lisa gave me a HYmini, a small, portable wind-turbine device that clips to the handlebars of my bike. Here’s how it works: As you ride, it turns a small propeller which generates/stores electrical power. It then detaches from the bike easily, and can be used to charge a variety of devices via its USB port. In my case, I use it to charge my cell phone, and occasionally a laptop or camera. Good old nerdy fun…I LOVE IT! (Thanks Lis!) I haven’t had to plug my phone into a wall outlet or car charger yet this year!

HYmini miniwiz mounted on my commuter bike
My HYmini, mounted on my commuter rig (and yes, those are indeed some old school, stem-mounted shifters too)

WARNING: Be prepared for some questions about “that fan on your handlebars”, or some sideways looks when when you power-up your laptop by plugging into a 3 inch “fan thing” sitting on the table in the meeting room - in which case, just tell them that “today’s presentation has been brought to you courtesy of my legs.”

Happy Bike to Work Day!


Freedom behind bars: bicycling and creativity

May 6, 2008

I’ve confessed here before that I’m a big bikehugger. In fact, my love for bicycles often takes a leap from “passion” and lands squarely in the middle of “compulsion”. Heaven help poor Lisa, putting up with my strange and endless obsession with bicycle parts and configurations. She knew I liked bikes when we met, but it was not until later, after we married, that I gradually revealed the full extent of my illness. Perhaps this Post-Nuptial Agreement for the Bicycle Rider sheds a bright light on my condition, and that of those bearing a similar affliction…and our poor spouses.

My trusty commuter bike

My trusty commuter bike, for traveling to the office, local meetings, etc.

I have long been drawn to bikes for many reasons; their simplicity, their details, their technology, their geometry, their colors, their practicality, and their seemingly limitless blends of form and function. I love it all. But perhaps the biggest reason is the joy and relaxation I find when pedaling a bike. Over the years I’ve found that riding a bike does as much for the health of my mind as it does for my body. Sometimes, there is nothing quite like a good long ride to clear away the cobwebs, the clutter, the daily stresses, and all the rest that fill my mind and obstruct clear thought.

Perhaps as a result of its clarifying ability, I’ve found exercise, in particular cycling, to be a great catalyst for creative thought. Often, in my work as a graphic designer, when I get stuck in a project, struggling for ideas, strategies, or solutions, a ride on the bike does wonders. It frees my mind. Better still, I’ve noticed positive effects that last throughout the remainder of the day, making me calmer, more even-tempered, and hopefully a bit easier person to live with (compulsions aside).

The idea of a relationship between creativity and exercise is nothing new. Although much of the information on this topic is anectodal, it is also fairly well-supported by scientific literature. In one such recent report, Aerobic Exercise and Creative Potential: Immediate and Residual Effects, written by Dr. David Blanchette, Chair of the Department of Management and Marketing at Rhode Island College, suggests that “aerobic workouts have potential benefits in aiding creativity processes”. The study, using college-age participants, indicated that that “instances of aerobic exercise significantly impacted the creative processes of the participants, and these effects were shown to endure over a two hour period.”

The ability to utilize the creativity-boosting benefits of exercise to one’s advantage may be something that can be learned, or least improved with practice. Perhaps, at a minimum, one must be open to the idea, allowing themselves to be receptive to the notion that exercise may indeed affect their thinking. This concept of an individual’s receptivity and mood prior to exercise and it’s role in that exercise’s ability to improve creativity was explored in a 1997 study by the British Journal of Sports Medicine, Exercise enhances creativity independently of mood, (Steinberg, Sykes, Moss, Lowery, LeBoutillier and Dewey). As the report’s title suggests, its results indicated “that mood and creativity were improved by physical exercise independently of each other.”

Have you noticed a link between your exercise patterns and your creative thinking skills?


Emerging logo design trends for 2008

April 22, 2008

It’s hard to believe it’s been a year already since I wrote about their last report (Logo design trends for 2007), but LogoLounge has again released their thought-provoking, mid-year report on trends in logo design. The report, written by Bill Gardner and published in the April issue of GD USA magazine, can be viewed in its entirety at gdusa.com.

The title, LogoLounge.com THE 2008 REPORT: MORE CLEAN and Less Green, reveals at least two of the “prevailing winds” identified at the start of this year’s report, working to shape the 15 trends identified within. “We saw less emphasis on sustainability or general “greenness” in logo design. There’s plenty of natural imagery but being “green” doesn’t seem all that unique anymore.”, Gardner writes. He also observes, “There’s an overall move toward cleanliness — in type, in line, in color — as if ideas are getting more and more succinct. It may be an indication of the degree of seriousness with which branding is now regarded.” Also speaking to the rise in simplicity within today’s designs, Gardner writes, “Less is more common: less calligraphy, less Photoshop tricks, less artificial highlights.”

Could these “winds” represent a societal backlash against the current trendiness of touting one’s “greenness”? Are we pushing back or pushing forward? Or, are we just getting past green? Similarly, could the desire for simplicity in design be an expression of our desire for simplicity in other parts of our complicated world? Or, are designers not an accurate mirror of the societies in which they work, making these question ill-conceived?

Regardless of the answers to the questions I’ve posed above, or of any outside influences that might be driving a move toward simplicity and away from the oft-overused software-generated effects, I, for one, am pleased to see it.

Deep questions aside for the moment, let’s get back to the matter at hand. Gardner identifies 15 trends within his report. He gives each of these trends a brief moniker, with some requiring a bit more explanation than others. For these explanations, the context, and the all-important visual examples of logos within each trend, I recommend reading the full report. Nevertheless, here they are in nitty-gritty list form:

1. Supernova
2. Fine Line
3. FoldOver
4. Global Expansion
5. Loops
6. Jawbreakers
7. Strobe
8. Nimbus
9. Stitch
10. Colorblind
11. Amoeba
12. Facets
13. Doodles
14. Flourish
15. Fibrous