Archive for the ‘Publications’ Category

LeftLion Issue 36

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

LeftLion issue 36 cover.indd

The latest issue of LeftLion magazine is currently doing to rounds and features what I think may well be the best cover we have ever ran. The artwork, entitled Byron Clough, was created by Notts illustrator Rikki Marr who kindly gave us permission to reproduce it as our latest cover. Cleverly fusing two of Nottingham’s icons - poet Lord Byron and football legend Brian Clough - into one being, the portrait is beautifully rendered in the style of a renaissance painting.

The image blew me away when I first saw it and I was extremely pleased when Rikki pitched it to me as a cover image - how could I resist? For anybody struggling to make it out, the text at the bottom of the images reads “I wouldn’t say I was the best Romanticist poet in the business, but I was in the top one”, in reference to one of Cloughie’s more infamous one-liners. 

The image was originally commissioned by a local boozer and a large version hangs on one of their walls in a gilted frame to give it that vintage touch. Anybody jones-ing for their own copy can get a limited edition print here.

New Work: Designottingham

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Designottingham magazine

It’s always exciting to get a project back from the printers and actually have it in your hands, as opposed to seeing it only existing on screen. Last week was no exception when the first editions of Designottingham magazine were delivered.

Commissioned by Nottingham Trent University, the magazine takes a look at Nottingham’s design story and NTU’s role within it. Covering everything from the legacy of the local lace industry through to the university’s world-renowned fine art and photography courses as well as articles on technology and innovation, architecture, and designing sustainable futures,  its scope is broad and documents a city packed full of creative talent.

Designed and laid out by my good self, typeset predominantly in Gill Sans Light, the magazine features specially commissioned artwork from local design studio Seismik, who once again deliver a great combo of cover and centrespread designs . Here’s a detail of their cover artwork; a selection of locally designed objects arranged in a lace pattern…

Designottingham cover detail

The centrespread they produced takes the form of a double-sided gatefold pullout timeline which plots the milestones in Nottingham’s design history, touching on wide array of iconic objects and inventions such as the automatic traffic light, HP Sauce, the Raleigh Chopper, Nottingham Alabaster and Pugin-designed gothic cathedrals.

Printed by Pensord (who I highly recommend for their attention to detail and easy going manner) on 80gsm offset stock with a heavier cover, the magazine has a really nice tactile finish and is packed full of design details such as a spot gloss finish on the lace cover, as well as the gatefold pullout centrespread which is intended to be wall-hung.

The magazine is not available on general sale but is being distributed worldwide as a promotional tool. A download link for an electronic copy should be avilable soon.

LeftLion Issue 35

Monday, June 14th, 2010

LeftLion issue35 cover

What? There’s a football World Cup going on in South Africa? Well, they kept that one quiet… Yes, it’s that time again, regular as a leap year, when half the world goes football crazy, not least the media. The latest issue of LeftLion magazine manages to avoid the hype and deliver its usual gamut of interviews with local and national cultural talent. The footy still gets a nod though, in the form of this great cover image by Jason and Simon at Seismik design studio - a pastiche of the famous ‘66 photo of Bobby Moore lifting the trophy, with Bobby being replaced by Brian Clough and surrounded by other Notts football legends. There’s a nice grubby, hand-drawn texture to it which they’ve carried through onto the wallchart centrespread they also did for the mag. Nice work!

Download an online copy here (link is in comments section).

LeftLion Issue 34

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

LeftLion 34 cover

Admittedly, I’m a week slow in posting this, but issue 34 of LeftLion magazine is out on the streets of Nottingham and available for mail order or download from their website. To coincide with the release of a certain film, this issue is a Robin Hood special edition, packed full of articles examining the enduring legend of the hooded man.

The cover image (seen above) was taken by our photo editor, Dom Henry, based on the idea of ‘if Robin and his merry men were still around today, what would they be doing?’. The answer, it seems, is that they would be sat around texting, stuffing their faces on fatty snacks and playing Nintendo Wii. So much for modern culture. 

The guy stood centre of frame with the leather cap is Ade Andrews - Nottingham’s official current-day Robin (not that he actually, y’know, robs people or anything). Working with the likes of Experience Nottinghamshire, Ade has an ambassadorial role within the city, giving visiting journalists city tours and appearing at major events as part of a tourist attraction troupe. And, of course, taking time out to play a little virtual archery with the local media.

See more of Dom Henry’s photography here.

LeftLion Issue 33

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

LeftLion issue 33 cover

The latest issue of LeftLion magazine is out now, featuring some wonderful cover artwork by Jeffrey Bowman, aka Mr Bowlegs. Jeff is a freelance illustrator and the go to man if you require abstractly composed drawings with a heavy dose of happiness injected into them.

The mag contains the usual mix of interviews, news and events listings, and features an interesting piece on cagefighting which is well worth checking out; if you’ve ever wondered what goes on in the heads of people who willingly take part in this sort of thing, this is your chance to find out. Downloadable PDFs and mail order copies are available here.

(Almost) Everything I Know About Magazine Design - part 3

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Okay, so it’s 6 months since I posted the last installment of my magazine / newspaper design tutorial series for InDesign users, which is way more of a gap than I intended, but I’d rather life got in the way of blogging than the other way round.

I have recently been working on a special secret publication which is due to be thrust into the world sometime in early 2010 and it has reminded me that I never got round to covering the do’s and don’ts of newspaper/mag design. Now seems as good a time as any to update the series, so let’s get on with the show with an article outlining common design pitfalls and how to avoid them, as well as a little look at workflow and some tips on how to give yourself a half-decent chance at getting the best print quality and reproduction on that wonderful no-frills paperstock they call newsprint…

Things you can’t do with a magazine on newsprint and other things to be aware of

Newspaper presses are designed to print large quantities cheaply and quickly - and they do this very well, but quality suffers as a result. You will never get the same reproductive quality from a newspaper press that you will from a high-end short-run press. Add to this the absorbent quality of newspaper softening the detail out of anything you print on it and you can begin to see the limitations of designing for a newspaper format magazine. This isn’t the same as designing for a heavy white stock with a nice finish which gives crisp repro and can be trimmed accurately, so different rules apply.

misregistered text (print)

8pt body copy is pretty small, and has thin lines. To ensure clearly readable articles in the magazine, text should always be set using only one colour, usually black, as cyan and magenta are only readable under the best of light, and yellow text on off-white paper would be a form of torture. If you start trying to print text at this size using a colour made up of 3 or 4 base colours (as in CMYK printing), the printing plates are going to struggle to line up accurately enough for each colour to land directly on top of each other, and the text will show ghosting and look fuzzy (as in the above image). Basically, stick to black body text and use colour to make things like the pull quotes stand off the main text.

misregistered text (inverted)

Equally, reversing white body text out of a dark background such as a photo is pretty much a no-no for the same reason. The slight mis-registering of printing plates will cause the background colours to fill in the unprinted space of the pale text, making it thinner and difficult to read, or pretty much invisible in the worst circumstances. (This is one thing on-screen proofing cannot account for). You can get away with doing this if your text is bold and above 10pt. Most fonts of 12pt or above will work fine without being bold, so it’s fine for headlines. 8pt body copy will disappear, though, and thin fonts often only work at much larger point sizes. It’s a game of millimetres and small things like this make a big difference to the end product.

printed dot gain example 1

Printed images in magazines are made up of tiny little dots of ink which your eye averages out and interprets as a recognisable picture (see exaggerated example of this in the pic above). The absorbent nature of newspaper causes some pretty severe dot-gain (the tiny dots of ink bleeding to a larger than intended size) which makes things print darker than intended (see comparison images below showing how the ink dots behave and the effect this has on print quality and image darkness - the left image shows how the dots are intended to print, the right image show how they end up printing once the newspaper absorbs the ink).

 printed dot gain example 2

This is something to bear in mind when using coloured textboxes for sidebars etc. neutral colour combos which have a tonal density of no more than 30% black seem to work best, especially if they contain no black themselves. Something like 15c/0m/20y/0k or 0c/10m/20y/0k will work against pretty much anything else you have on the page without colour clashing, and allows body text to stand out fine. If I want a grey box behind my text, I don’t use a tint of black, I’ll use equal amounts of CM&Y, something like 20c/20m/20y; it gives you a nicer looking grey than straight black and ensures your black layer (ie. your text layer) can be printed without any screening, making for crisp separation between the text and the grey background.

Try sticking to using colour combos which use only 2 inks when using coloured text and boxes; this stops the pages getting too inky (you know that nasty inky newspaper feeling) and also minimises registration problems, giving a sharper print. You can get a surprisingly wide array of colours. An old printing firm who produced a magazine I once worked on gave me a great swatch booklet containing every two colour CMYK combo in 5% increments on A5 oversize newsprint which was my bible for years. It’s now sadly lost and sorely missed - if you can get hold of one, do so; they are invaluable.

Formatting Images in Photoshop

I have always converted RGB images to CMYK before doing any tweaking on them, as that is the way I was taught - make the adjuments to images using the same colour colour space they will ultimately be printed in - it is more accurate. But, for this magazine, I have a CMYK profile from the printers which accounts for the dot gain and the other perculiarities of their newspaper press, so I use a different method.

I make all my adjustments to the images in RGB mode, then once they look how I want on screen, I load the printer profile into Photoshop and convert them to CMYK, which makes them go much paler and look horrible. It’s fine though - the lightness compensates for the afore-mentioned dot gain; the images print much better for it and come back looking as intended in the final product.

Take the cover image below for example; the version on the left is the RGB file without the CMYK print profile applied to the image into Photoshop. This is how I want the cover to look in print, but if I send it to the printers like this, it will print too dark due to dot gain. Loading in the CMYK print profile changes the file to the image on the right - way too light when viewed on screen (look at the magazine logo, which should be black) but, when printed, looks like the image on the left.

(This is not something you want to blindly guess at - you will need your printer’s profile and it will also take a couple of instances of seeing how the files you send your printers come back in print before you can start getting a feel for how much dot-gain compensation you need to take into account - every combination of paperstock and printing press will yeild different results, so tread carefully.)

magazine print density variation

A typical Photoshop workflow on an image I’m going to import into inDesign is as follows:
Open image in RGB mode and assess what needs doing to it.

Open Curves and draw an S-shape to bring up the contrast / tonal range as needed, making sure that the whites and blacks don’t blow out (unless I actually want them to) (most images tend to need a bit of lightening and extra contrast, some need colour correction which can be done by applying curves to individual colour channels).

Fix/erase any bits which require attention (hopefully none).

Load printer profile and convert to CMYK

Add an unsharp mask of approx 80-120 threshold (adjust to suit each image), px value: always 1. This adds sharpness to the image to the point where it looks oversharp - this is to compensate the image softening which is caused by the printing process / paper stock.

Save file at the size I need it (or slightly larger), 200DPI.

Close file and place it into InDesign.

Exporting PDFs for print from InDesign

This is pretty straightforward, tbh. The printers LeftLion use like to receive the files as single pages with 5mm bleed on all edges and no printer’s marks. So choose the ‘press’ option in InDesign’s PDF export options, then tweak a few settings:

Tick the ‘view PDF after export’ box so that you can check the file once it’s done.

Change the CMYK export setting to ‘leave unchanged’ (This will stop InDesign’s CMYK profile overriding the printer profile applied to the images in Photoshop).

Uncheck all printer’s marks boxes (the printers of this magazine add their own print marks. Some printers perfer you to add them to the file).

Put 5mm in all four bleed boxes.

Save this as a custom export setting to be re-used on all pages of the magazine.

A few seconds after exporting, a nice PDF of the page should pop up on your screen. If there are any fonts missing, InDesign should flag them up so you can go back and deal with them, then export again.

I’m sure there’s plenty of things I have forgotten to mention, so if you think I haven’t covered something well, or at all, let me know and I’ll expand it where appropriate.

LeftLion Issue 32

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

LeftLion issue 32 cover

So, the end of the decade is upon us - the Noughties are over! With this in mind, the latest issue of LeftLion magazine takes a long hard look at the first ten years of the 21st century and the cultural nuggets it has spewed forth. After handing over cover duties on the previous issue to Rob White, this time it was back to me to produce the artwork for our first cover since winning the Nottingham Creative Business Writing & Publishing award in October.

We decided that a great way to represent the multitude of people, events and cultural milestones the decade will be remembered for was to nick someone else’s idea parody the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper cover, which did the same thing for the sixties. Hey, if it’s good enough for Peter Blake and the biggest band of all time, then it’s probably good enough for us too, right?

As well as cutting out all the ‘celebs’ who grace the cover (ranging from global leaders to local icons and interviewees), I will admit to cutting corners with the bottom of the image; I had originally intended to buy some flowers arrange and photograph to make up the letters for ‘Noughty Notts’ on the grass, as per the original album artwork. This idea was soon modified to the more realistic solution of drawing the floral lettering; however, a broken scanner and looming deadline meant the idea got watered down to using a font made from a flowery pattern.

To be honest, keeping it simple possibly works in the cover’s favour, keeping the clutter and fuss down, but I am a sucker for such extra little details. One thing I will definitely not be missing, though, is Photoshop’s pen tool, which I will now be doing my best to avoid for the next few weeks after becoming painfully familiar with it over the course of producing this cover.

A bigger version of the artwork can be seen here.

A digital PDF of the entire issue can be downloaded here.

LeftLion Issue 31

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

*UPDATE: LeftLion came top of the pile in the Writing & Publishing category of the annual Nottingham Creative Business Awards last week. Well done to everybody involved. Sights are now firmly set on winning the Creative Business of the Year award in 2010!

LeftLion issue 31 cover

Wow; has it really been two months since I last posted on this blog? I find it hard to believe, but the dateline on the last post tells me it’s true. The lack of updates recently is not because I’ve been slack; quite the opposite - I’ve been too busy to put in any time at the computer beyond clearing work and hitting deadlines. It can all get a bit much sometimes, you know, being a designer and spending many lonely hours staring at a monitor, so I let the blogging slide for a few weeks in favour of meeting deadlines and staying sane.

There was also some sunshine to enjoy and a bit of server downtime to knock my blogging rhythm, but at least I have plenty of new work to share with you over the next few weeks. Firstly, the latest edition of LeftLion magazine is out on the streets of Nottingham, so keep your eyes peeled for the latest bi-monthly installment of local cultural goodness lurking in various shops and pubs in the city. Big shout to Rob White for the cover illustration and Alan Gilby for his tidy page layouts - good work, sirs!

magazine covers montage

Also on the LeftLion tip, the previous issue featured a centrefold pullout of the covers from all 30 issues. That’s five years’ worth of cover designs on one page. It is great for me personally to be able to see all these commissions presented together - I remember every single one of them, which means my brain isn’t showing any signs of aging just yet. It is also nice to see such an array of styles used among the covers without any of them looking out of place or belonging to a different title; the LeftLion identity just seems to go from strength to strength. I hope you enjoy looking through them.

Click here to see a larger version, and feel free to download any of the individual issues here.

LeftLion Issue 30

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

LeftLion issue 30 cover

So, in my post on issue 29 of LeftLion magazine, I mentioned a vague plan to use some vibrant illustration for the front cover of our fifth birthday issue. Well, we ended up with a photographic cover, but it does feature some illustrations - seven of them, in fact.

We decided, rather than settle for one illustration, it would be better to commision a bunch of our regular illustrators to each make us a birthday card. The cards were then set up in an arrangement suitable for a fifth birthday with cake, candles, crepe paper and all. The resulting setup was photographed by my good self, who then took great delight in making the cake disappear :o)

Thanks to Alex Godwin, George Mitchell, Kim Thompson, Rob White, Ging Inferior, Alison Hedley and Mike Lomon for their card contributions.

Talkin ‘Bout Mags

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Poddingham logo

Last week I was a guest on the Leftion podcast, Poddingham, chatting to editor Jared Wilson about the upcoming 5th birthday issue and looking back at the previous 30 issues. Click the link to hear us talking about the crazy days of staying up until 6am to hit print deadline and other tales of the madness of magazine production. Our slot starts 32minutes into the show. I don’t get an introduction, so magically appear a couple of minutes into the conversation.