Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Who is Jennifer Hopkins?


A short interview with the talented Jennifer Hopkins.

Name: Jennifer Hopkins

Position: Senior Designer at Saputo Design, Inc.

How did you become interested in design?

I took a bunch of classes at junior college, and the one about design was the one I loved the most. I just liked all the type!

What's your favorite band?

The Pixies.

If you could meet any celebrity, who would it be and why?

Right now, it would have to be Nathan Fillion - because he's a dork.

If you could have a superpower, what would it be?

The ability to freeze time. Sometimes, you need a break!

What's your favorite part of working at Saputo?

The people.

One word of advice for designers?

To be confident in what you do - it goes a long way. That and drink lots of coffee!

Glasgow 2014 Pictorgrams


For each Olympics, a graphic design team is given the initiative to reinvent the pictograms used to depict each Olympic sport. For a global campaign such as the Olympics’ pictograms, icons have to be simple enough to be understood by a world audience, but must be aesthetically pleasing to a wide variety of different people from vastly different cultures. Needless to say, it’s a difficult job.

This year, according to this article by Creative Review, the pictograms for the Glasgow Commonwealth Games in 2014 were unveiled last week by studio Tangent Graphic. These pictograms have a more simplified look that feature double lines, as well as different line weights, to emphasize certain key parts of the icon. While we think that they are different and definitely creative, our absolute favorite icons were from last year’s Vancouver Olympics – take a look at the genius here.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Webinspeer


HTML is still just a child and we’re only beginning to see what it is capable of. Not only is this a collection of great looking websites, but they also exemplify the potential of HTML. As browsers become more powerful, we will only see more and more of this type of creative design. Check it out!

Satellite Collections


Take a look at this article about artist Jenny Odell’s work, Satellite Collections. She manually scans Google maps, collecting different types of man-made objects and arranging them together to form a beautiful piece of art.

According to Odell, “they’re things we often overlook or take for granted as part of our environment; but somehow, from a satellite point of view, they reveal themselves to be (somewhat) ubiquitous signs of human civilization, popping up in certain places while the surrounding area may simply be desert or mountains. From this perspective there’s something very fragile and nostalgic about them.”

What an imaginitive way to combine nature, humanity, and the omnipresent technological age.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Newbury Park Girls Softball Team T-Shirt


For an 8-year old girl, softball isn't just about stealing bases and hitting home runs. It's about friendship, pizza parties, sunshine, getting stung by a bee... all the little things. That's why when we got the assignment to make a t-shirt for the Newbury Park Girls Softball Team, we didn't want to make your typical sporty, jersey-inspired shirt. We wanted something different and representative of everything that goes on in a little girl's life - something with a little more heart.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Pasta Girl Logo

My sister Nina asked me to help her with the identity and branding of her new company, Pasta Girl.  Pasta Girl produces Sicilian-style recipes and baked goods based on the original peasant-style foods my mother Angela cooked for our family.

Mom, now in her mid-eighties, never really kept an organized recipe book or measured ingredients for her dishes.  Instead, her measuring methodology included a "a handful of this," or "a pinch of that," and the usual "I add until it tastes right - stop asking so many questions Tommy and get out of the kitchen."  So while mom’s tastes have changed over the last few years and she has forgotten most of the ingredients, Nina has been transcribing and cooking each dish in a slow trial and error experimentation to figure out the contents of each recipe.   She will then turn them into a family recipe book that will eventually be published under the Pasta Girl brand name.

As for Pasta Girl's identity, the creative approach was almost a no brainer when it came to, if you will, a creative a strategy.  Mom had to be the icon of the brand.  It was an emotional inspiration stemming from the images of our childhood; a large Italian-American family consisting of Mom, Dad, five kids and grandma Maceri from Palermo riding shotgun in the 64' wood paneled Mercury Colony Park Station Wagon.

Here's a review of the creative progression of the logo as we continued through the rounds to the final design.

The first step was to concept a few hand-drawn type treatments:







After that, we scanned some of the preferred type to the computer, traced with the pen tool, perfected the lines, and chose the colors.





The next step was to add the type to the chosen graphic elements, designed by Tom Saputo and Georgia Lange.



Tada! The logo added to a packaging concept. It's still a work in progress, but it's almost there. We'll continue to update you on the Pasta Girl saga as the look becomes finalized.

Kinetic Type



Take a look at this amazing piece of animation by design student Jacob Gilbreath. It seamlessly combines the two best things on Earth: Conan O'Brien & typography.

As quoted by Gilbreath himself, "The concept behind this video is to show Conan O'Brien as a the monumental entertainer and solid wall that he is. Conan O'Brien is and will continue to be a seasoned television entertainer. After drawing inspiration from Lou Dorfsman's Gastrotypographicalassemblage, this concept was achieved by creating a literal wall from over 60 individual typographic layouts. These custom crafted layouts reference a variety of eclectic type design. The combination of eclectic typography and modern 3D letter forms achieved in Cinema 4D provides a contrast between old and new. This contrast emphasizes time to create a sturdy and timeless object. This solidity and timelessness is the perfect representation of Conan O'Brien."

Love it.