me news

in progress

two new projects i’m currently working on: above is a sneak preview of a new ballet poster (image fragment courtesy of ‘ingrid baars’) we’re still playing around with this one but it’s looking great… and i am also making a title sequence in stop-motion using blue and/or green ‘chroma key’ which involves lots of coloured string, stop motion, ‘after effects’ and a lot of hours patience, the technique is one i’ve just devised so it’s difficult to say how it’s going to work just yet… i’ll be testing the whole thing next week

m / 07-08-2010 16:02 - tags: , , ,  

poster animé

it’s all strictly geometric shapes & vibrant colours for french designer benoît bodhuin, also check his animated newspaper

spotted via gestaltlos the brand new german blog from my friend ‘uwe’ (welcome to the blogosphere and happy posting…)

m / 05-08-2010 10:29 - tags: , , , ,  

why a spelling mistake could be costly…

johnson banks have just restyled virgin atlantic and although the result is perhaps a bit underwhelming to me, the stop-motion film (shown below) is definitely worth a watch… how many hours and people does it take to revamp a boeing? and that’s just one plane… wow

the identity requires the red to be metallic and not opaque which as you can see here, meant stripping the whole plane down to bare metal… nice touch

p.s. this is also my first post on ‘fontanel’ too… yipee

m / 04-08-2010 15:59 - tags: , ,  

new shoes always hurt

a little post i made last week showing a sneak preview of the new vpro identity by ‘thonik’ received a few comments, mostly from ‘haters’ and a few careful positive reactions, i also received a few reactions by mail, all very negative… and after a re-post of my story by some design friends on facebook last week, the new design got a real bashing with some very harsh words being spoken… my own opinion is somewhere in the middle i guess, the new logo doesn’t seem to really add anything to the story and looks rather corporate, thonik here once again using their own corporate typeface to brand a client…

however i do feel that it could have been a lot ‘worse’ the essence of the old logo has been restyled (a question of taste this one) and although the logo has lost a lot of the quirkiness that the old one (made by max kisman) contained… it all feels a bit too rational and clean… as i said on facebook in response to the haters… maybe the ‘rational’ feel is a sign of the times, holland has changed a lot since that old logo was born… the country has become more corporate, more rational and certainly much much less left-wing than it was (see the news this week…sigh…) and in that sense this logo is perhaps a true reflection of the culture that it is part of… how sad…

as one comment pointed out, we should wait and see what the whole picture is when it is launched for real later this month… if my ‘sneak preview post’ proves anything, it will certainly be receiving very ‘mixed’ reviews whatever the story behind it…

m / 02-08-2010 20:34 - tags: ,  

fix the problem, fix the logo?

is the helios destined for the scrap heap? an interesting article from ‘dan dimmock’ on the identity forum over the precarious bp identity, the possibility that the brand may survive the disaster (i too believe it could) and some revealing case studies of companies that have previously rebranded after global disasters or malpractice, the union carbide one shown below for example is pretty bizarre… from gassing local villagers to a cat with nine lives…

although according to one of the comments below the article, they are already working on a rebrand to the name ‘amoco’, we shall see…

Dependent on the outcome of the next few days, weeks and months — combined with history, years of profit, accumulated growth, thousands of staff — one can’t help wonder whether BP’s green and yellow, environmentally inspired and instantly recognisable ‘Helios’ will ever again evoke trust, assurance
and loyalty.

If BP is able to position itself as accountable for all its actions, remain respectful of its size and position and prove itself capable by delivering the promises it has made, perhaps not even the largest onslaught of global, cross-platform disapproval can knock the Helios from its pedestal.

On proving itself to be ‘Beyond Petroleum’, and borne from forward-looking, innovative insight, is BP’s identity system so flexible, powerful and sustainable it will be able to support the brand, whatever the crisis?

m / 30-07-2010 10:57 - tags: , ,