Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Chemical brother

This can of toxic sludge has been sitting around our studio for as long as I can remember.


I've never bothered to find out what's inside - the logo design is enough for me. It could be empty for all I care.

Related: Brochure filled with household chemical safety tips, all with really fresh "generic" designs. I'm really into the PAINT and COUGH SYRUP logos. Thanks Shell!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Music logos

Here are three fantastic music-related logos.


From top to bottom:

1. Guitar Institute (1978)

2. Music Man speakers and amplifiers (1974). They have since merged with Ernie Ball, makers of fine guitar strings. Here's a Music Man speaker in action:



3. Illammend Corporation (1970), makers of electric organs.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Philately Fridays: USA, 1982


This week's stamps are from the 1982 World's Fair, held in Knoxville, TN. The theme of 1982's expo was "Energy Turns the World," as evidenced by illustrations in the stamps.


Click for larger view.

I grew up in Nashville, and while we didn't end up making it over to the fair, I have very clear memories of the TV ads, especially the YOU'VE GOT TO BE THERE! at the end.



I'm also a big fan of the Sunsphere, built for the fair and still standing in Knoxville:

Feature Interview: Richard Stanley


In a recent post, I showed the logo for the St. Paul Humane Society:


The logo was created by a designer named Richard Stanley. Very drawn to the logo and its Minnesota connection, I tracked him down and found that he was keeping himself quite busy during the 1970s, doing some top-notch graphic design work. Richard was kind enough to answer a few questions and share some photos of his old sketchbooks! I now present to you So Much Pileup's very first feature interview.



How did you become interested in graphic design and when did you begin working in the field?

I was a “draw on the walls” kid in my Richfield (Minnesota) home with a commercial artist uncle to mentor me. When he moved to Spokane WA I spent summers in high school working in his art department learning paper plate printing, hand lettering, and watercolor painting. He said it was his job to “knock the stars out of my eyes” about commercial art. While I was attending the Minneapolis School of Art (later MCAD), I had summer jobs in industrial motion pictures, still photography, and film animation. My primary interest was in photography and film.





What were some of your favorite projects to work on?

Over the years, I’ve had the most satisfaction working on corporate identity and museum exhibition graphics. Trademarks have always been like solving a visual puzzle with their potential interplay of word and image leading to a single statement. Museum graphics add a three dimensional as well as movement through time component to design that is both persuasive and informational. Both have required more organizational responsibility and an engaged consultative attitude. Outside of design, I’m very involved in photography and drawing.

Click drawings for larger view



As many contemporary graphic designers, myself included, don't know what it was like to have been a designer in the pre-computer era, could you talk a bit about the process of taking a job such as a logo design project from start to finish without the aid of Adobe Illustrator?

I don’t think there’s much difference in the “head work” of designing an identity even if the “hand work” has changed. I still need to do research about the client, immerse myself in understanding the nature of their business, and work cooperatively to create an effective solution. The hand work is somewhat different, but not as much as one might think. I have always spent a lot of time sketching and drawing a wide variety of approaches to a mark; often employing a semiotic analysis to find the best approach: word, image, or combination. Only after I’ve got a fairly good idea of what it will look like do I go to the Mac. Before the computer, everything would be drawn out in black and white paint Now I trace my sketches and refine in Illustrator.




Richard Stanley's developmental sketches and final logo for G&K Services


Click for larger view



How has the computer changed the way you think about design and approach different design jobs?

Very little. I don’t think of the computer as anything other than a capable tool. I can produce more, do more of the work myself (a mixed blessing) and complete jobs faster using the computer. It will never replace working in a consultative way with the client or hand drawing. I have always liked doing my own illustration and photography, so Photoshop is as much a necessity now as a digital camera.


Click for larger view




Click for larger view

What was some of your greatest inspiration back then and now?

While at the Minneapolis School of Art, my first inspiration then and until his passing was Rob Roy Kelly. He taught all of us to “save the world for design” and, for us, it was a real cause. Later, I went to Switzerland for grad studies with Armin Hofmann, Wolfgang Weingart, and Kurt Hauert, all of whom made a profound difference in the way I looked at design. They taught that design is a logical process, that creative analysis combined with careful attention to detail would produce the optimal solution. Finally, my continuing friendship with Dale Johnston, which started at Design Center in Minneapolis always put a human and compassionate face on design. Together, they have made continuing education a pleasurable necessity.



Thanks for taking the time to share your design work and insight Richard! Readers, please visit Mr. Stanley online at swisstrix.com.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

OPP: Delicious Design League


This edition of Other Peoples' Pileup comes from my friend Billy Baumann, the graphic design powerhouse behind the fantastic Delicious Design League. Based on the West side of Chicago, Delicious has been churning out countless gorgeous gig posters featuring Billy's design work which is obviously heavily influenced by the 1960s.

I asked Billy to send in some inspiration and he sent me some photos of this great book he found called Chicago Graphics '65. How appropriate. Take it away dude!




When you asked me to contribute I had a hard time picking just one thing out of my collection of crap but I landed on this piece because I thought it was uniquely Chicago and something that might be pretty rare; non-existent out side this area I would think.

I found this book at a local Antique Mall call BAM (Broadway Antique Mall). It was behind glass but the cover looked promising enough that I took a closer look - It had everything, "Chicago" "Graphics" and "'65" all in one place so I couldn't let it pass.

What I found on the inside was this, "A printed reflection of the bounding spirit of the industry in this Graphic Arts Capital of the World.", a pretty hefty statement to say the least.



The first part of the book consists of a mission statement as well as profiles of the 34 guilds and clubs that contributed to its contents. The photos remind me of that show MadMen (if I watched that show). I thought I would find the Aesthetic Apparatus guys in one of the photos - they would've fit right in.



The main section of the book consists of all b/w images of every aspect of design from packaging to identity to annual reports to magazine covers to general advertising.  Quite a few of the pieces featured within are pretty cool and obviously reflected an area of design still steeped in modernism - your not going to find any psychedelics in this tome. These were works from the old guard - good solid design from men that wore suits everyday, no moptops here, and whose wives stayed home with kids. Perhaps the last hangers on from an area soon to me stomped out by civil rights, the war & lysergic acid diethylamide.






Click image for larger view

The back section, which uses color, is full of ads for all the resources that designers used - from printers to typographers and photographers - it's interesting that they saved the color for that section.



As a graphic resource this book is pretty cool but as a anthropological artifact of the era this book is absolutely great. 

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Infancia '76

Here's a poster from Spain, 1976. Designed by Francisco Bas for the 14th Children and Youth Festival held from late 1976 - early '77. I can't resist letters made up of shapes and vice versa, so this one is a no-brainer for me. If anyone has more information on the designer, please share!

Monday, October 6, 2008

OPP: Leon Ferri


Last week, I got a submission from Pileup reader Leon Ferri. He sent in some photos of this great book he found at a thrift store and it's fully worth sharing. So many of these old book covers make me want to throw the "Don't judge a book by its cover" rule out the window ... I mean look how fresh this is!


Helvetica Bold + simple line illustrations = How to get me to look at your book cover.


I'm not mad at this illustration style either.

Thanks Leon! You can catch him DJing each and every Friday night online at WCDB 90.9FM when he brings you the best new wave '80s music program you can find in Albany NY!

Friday, October 3, 2008

Philately Fridays: Israel 1976


In a sort of late and vague commemoration of the welcoming of the Jewish new year late last week, I'm showing three Israeli stamps commemorating their new year in 1976.





Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Bill Hyde

Here are some typographic illustrations from San Francisco's Bill Hyde. I was surprised to find out how early these were created, a good 6 or 7 years before the psychedelic type-based posters of Wes Wilson and Victor Moscoso started to surface ... also from San Francisco ... coincidence? He had a really interesting quote / work philosophy in an article I was reading about him that fits my outlook on design: "Preserve the old, but know the new."


Sheraton-Palace Hotel, 1964


The Art Director and Artists Club of San Francisco, 1960


Christmas card and poster, 1960

PS - HAPPY BIRTHDAY to one of the finest graphic design blogs in the known universe, Grain Edit! Congratulations to Dave for running such a tight ship for the last year and here's to many more. Please rush over to Grain Edit to enter their one year anniversary giveaway with prize packages featuring a poster designed by yours truly and t-shirts, prints, and books from Aaron Draplin, YouWorkForThem, iso50, Small Stakes, and many others!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

As Seen Online: HBO on-air graphics


As a young buck who spent a lot of time watching television in the early 1980s, I was always fascinated with the HBO intro... you know... the camera flying over the city and the giant chrome letters rising up and then turning into a neon space station. I found a bunch of earlier renditions of HBO's station identification animations which are also worth checking out, so here they are:

1978, quick animation. very hot rainbow stripe logo:



Late 1980, total Great Space Coaster style:



Late 1981, art deco disco laser style:



The main attraction:



Can't forget the April Fool's edition:





and now, one of the freshest things I've ever seen on Youtube, a stunning behind-the-scenes look at the creation of the infamous 1983 HBO "city" intro. Hold onto your hats...

Monday, September 29, 2008

OPP: Bryan Haker


Today I'm passing the baton to my dude Bryan Haker. Bred in Minneapolis, Hake The Snake gets 'er done in Do Or Die Bed Stuy and is a hell of a resource of modern design knowledge and Jamaican patois. Take it away my friend...




Yasaburo Kuwayama was born in Niigata prefecture, Japan in 1938. He graduated from the Musashino Art University in 1962 and taught Typography at Asagaya Acadademie de Beaux-Arts for 5 years from 1966. In 1969 he established the Kuwayama Design Room. In 1970 he began teaching typography at the Musashino Art University. In '75 he was teaching lettering at the Asahi Center and served as a permanent manager of the Japan Finish Work Association. In 1979 he retired from his posts and allowed him more time for other interests. 

Says here that at present (I doubt it, the book is pretty old) he is a member of the Association du Typographique Internationale, the Japan Typography Association, the Federation of German Typographers, The Tokyo Designers Space and the Japan Graphic Designer Association

And to top it off he's a Jehovah Witness ( Not that there's anything wrong with that) I trust the Pileup is an equal opportunity organization.

His main books include Lettering & Design, Typeface Design, and Graphic Elements of the World.





POW!

Most of this was taken from one of his other books I have. More over, I came upon the guy from finding one of his books at a book drive in a hipstered-out park in Brooklyn. Even better yet, It was free!!  Got over on that one.. I think I have 3-4 of his books now.. all holy grail steez.