Archive for the ‘Work’ Category

New Work: Bar Rebranding & Signage

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The Pulse lightbox

My local university re-branded its main campus bar back in autumn, ditching the ‘Glo Bar’ moniker and associated logo which read more like ‘grow bag’ in favour of the name ‘The Pulse’, as chosen by student vote (yes, democracy is alive and well). I was drafted in to create an identity and logo for the venue, something which had been on the cards since I gave one of their other campus bars a new identity a year earlier.

The idea behind the name is that, as the main campus bar, the venue is the focal point for student activities, particularly in the evenings, and so is the heartbeat of the Students Union, a line which has been used to market the newly branded bar. This led to a stipulation in the brief that the logo should contain some kind of heart monitor pulse graphic.

I knew straight away that I didn’t just want to pick a typeface and set the text in it straight off the peg; it almost always makes me cringe when I see a logotype which is just a straight untreated typeface - there’s no unique defining characteristic of a logo which is formed in this way, and therefore has little to offer in terms of unique identity, which is one of branding’s basic tenets.

So, after trying a few options, I picked a clean, modern, stylised typeface (in this case, Moderna) to set the basic text in and then started tweaking it into something which gelled as a logo. I actually dislike quite a lot of letterforms in this font, but the ones I needed for this design worked well together, so I was happy to go with it.

The Pulse bar logo

I wanted the letters to appear connected up, almost as if they were constructed from one continuous line so I overlapped the individual characters and added a white outline to separate them. Then I manually added, subtracted and rotated elements of the characters until they linked up in a fluid, balanced way without hindering readability. The curve at the bottom of the ‘l’ really brought it together for me - once I added that, the whole thing fell into place in a matter of minutes. The red heart monitor pulse underline serves double duty in framing the logo and providing a baseline which helps to ground the lettering and balance it in a way which was difficult to achieve with the stalk of the lower case ‘p’ descending below the baseline of the rest of the text.

The placement of the ‘the’ rotated 90 degrees mirrors that of the previous campus bar I created a logo for, creating a convention for all other bar identities to follow at the university. The logo also looks great in white on black too, as evidenced by the lightbox sign situated above the bar entrance.

The Pulse interior

Inside, I arranged to have 4 large format prints installed showing some great photography from concerts which have been held at the venue in recent times. These have a really strong visual impact on the interior space, especially when the lights are dimmed and the spotlights are trained on the prints - it ends up looking halfway between a bar and an art gallery, which is no bad thing in my book.

New Work: Radio Presenter portraits

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

FlyFM presenter portraits

Here’s a selection of portraits from a couple of recent sessions spent with the presenters of FlyFM, a university radio station. These were all done with a 2 light setup and a reflector, with a ubiqiutous marigold emulsioned wall nuked with flash to serve as an impromptu white/light grey seamless backdrop.

I guess that’s one advantage of such a boring, universally disliked wall colour being so common. This does however beg the question, if it is so widely disliked, why is it so common in the first place?

(click on the image, which links to my flickr page, to see a bigger version.)

New Work: LeftLion T-shirts

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

LeftLion t-shirt

A couple of years ago I designed some t-shirts for LeftLion based around the idea of urban development and LeftLion’s role in the city. They sold out in a matter of weeks. Back by popular demand after a long wait, the second edition prints are now on sale, available in any colour scheme as long as it’s white on black, to misquote Henry Ford.

Printed by Regenerate Clothing in association with Shop, they were looking mighty fine as modelled by the guy I saw wearing one in a Sherwood pub while I was enjoying some bangers and mash the other day. Start the new decade in style and celebrate the growth of LeftLion and it’s host city by bagging yourself one of these limited edition t-shirts. Limited stock available here.

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.

New Work: SPS Anniversary Logo

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Saltburn Photographic 50th anniversary logo

I was recently asked to pitch some logo ideas for the upcoming 50th anniversary of the Saltburn Photographic Society, a regional club for photography enthusiasts. The society had sent me some draft ideas which they thought I might like to develop.

The ideas were okay, but didn’t really grab me and as I thought about what alternatives to pitch, inspiration struck - what if I used the ‘0′ character to represent a lens and built the logo around the shape of a camera body? I started experimenting and found that the 5 worked well to visually suggest the handgrip of an SLR.

I chose a nice clean font with a perfectly circular ‘0′ character and a stylish ‘5′ then set about tracing the image a camera body to define the logo shape. It took a bit of work to get enough elements worked into the design to make the camera shape obvious but also simple enough to understand easily without losing the text elements or compromising on style.

Once I was happy with the composition of the elements which made up the logo, I re-coloured the camera in gold for a 50th anniversary feel. This helped the camera body recede from the eye and allowed the ‘50th Anniversary’ text to come to the fore. I also added the original SPS logo to the design (The ‘S’ with the eye in the centre of the lens), which conveniently worked as a lens iris and filled in the hollow centre as well as strengthening the SPS brand within the anniversary logo.

As a final touch, I added the small retro camera strap to give the sense of history I felt was appropriate for a 5oth anniversary logo. A version without the camera strap also exists to provide layout options on their promotional materials.

If you like this work and feel I may be able to help your business improve it’s corporate image or promotional materials, please get in touch.

New Work: Corporate Portraits

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Corporate Portrait - Jon

Here’s one image from the second round of corporate portraits I recently completed for local university staff. I didn’t have the luxury of a photo studio this time, just a bare wall freshly painted in magnolia for a backdrop, but I managed to replicate the look of the original series by controlling the lighting.

This series of shots were all lit with the same 2 flash setup - one bare flash nuking the wall behind the subject, making sure it ended up white in the photo, and one flash through a brolly 45degs high left to light the faces softly but with enough direction to sculpt the features nicely, as evidenced by this shot of Jon. (I could post the other 39 portaits from the session to show how repeatable these results are, but I’m guessing that would get a bit boring, not least for me having to upload them all).

I controlled the depth of the shadows by getting each person to hold a glossy piece of white card on their lap to reflect the main light back upwards and lighten the under-chin shadow (it also gave the nervous folk something to concentrate on other than the shiny big lens pointing right at them). A full length reflector was placed just out of the frame on the right hand side to lighten up the unlit portion of the subject’s face. Finally, 30 seconds work in Photoshop gave the image the final sheen I was looking for.

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.

New Work: Corporate Portraits

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

corporate portraits

I’ve been pretty busy with the camera recently; shooting animations, gigs, product shots, portraits and magazine covers in the last week. The images above are from a series of corporate headshots I made of the Elected Board of Directors (nice job titles!) for a local university student union. I was pretty pleased with the way these came out (larger versions can be seen here) - soft and light without being blown out, which is exactly what they were looking for. The organisation obviously liked them too - there is now a plan to extend this project to cover all staff members with the photos being used on a web page introducing the company staff. 60 headshots in 3 hours? Easy!

New Work: Website Animation

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

web animation edit

Okay, I must confess something. Though I am obsessed with still images, moving images (as in films/TV/adverts) have never really got my pulse racing. I know it’s not fashionable or very 21st century, but they just haven’t.

I am a man who is prone to contemplation and analysis, so perhaps I prefer working with stills as they give me the time to do this, whereas a movie reel doesn’t allow for it so much.Maybe my brain is just a little slow, though I wonder how much real-time analysis one can do at 30 frames-per-second.

Whatever. I like still images. And animation. I’ve always loved animation, especially low framerate stuff which is all jumpy. Seeing the joins between frames gives me the comfort of seeing the individual stills which make up the animation so I can work out what is going on, plus, I like the charm of it. But that’s just me; I know there’s plenty of people out there who like things as slick as they come, if not slicker, but I’m not one of them. So, this is about as motion-orientated as my work gets - a jumpy stopframe animation done for a part of a website I have been working on. It was shot with a Nikon D70 DSLR and 3 flashguns, then pieced together in Adobe Imageready.

It is going to be used to visually represent the ‘virtual receptionist’ which allows people to chat directly to one of the company directors when they are online. There’s a still version for when nobody from the company is available to chat, and the animated version above which comes to life when somone logs on.

Incidentally, the guy in the animation is David Cameron Walker, the new daytime voice of BBC Radio 1, provider of voiceover links between the different programs and news bulletins etc. So, if you have heard his voice and were wondering what he looks like, wonder no more. Just don’t expect me to make any jokes about him having ‘a good face for radio’. (Sorry Dave, just kidding).