World Cup chart competition entry

13 May, 2010 (11:48) | News, Portfolio, Work | By: Brian

Wallchart updated 30/06/10 to include all results to date and Quarter final ties

Our friends at The Drum magazine are running a competition to design a World Cup wallchart to help follow the up coming tournament this summer. We spent hours looking at other wallcharts out there and decided that a clear, crisp and typographic solution was the way forward. We’re so pleased with it we thought we should share it beyond the competition — after all, it might not win — so we’re putting it online here for you to download and print off yourself.

We plan to update the chart as the tournament progresses with scores, final group tables, last 16, quarter, semi and final scores and teams, giving you a full picture of the event as it progresses. Can you tell we love our football?

We should point out that this is an unofficial item and is in no way endorsed by FIFA. Any infringement of copyright or naming rights is purely accidental.

Dear politicians: Serve.

6 May, 2010 (11:50) | News, Not work as such | By: Brian

Dear Politicians: Remember, you were elected to serve us, not your own agendas.After what seems to have been an eternity we are now voting for our next government. There have been lies, subterfuge and more spin than a launderettes on wash day, but now finally we might get a new kind of politics in Britain. However unless we, the British people, remind those that get elected today that we are watching them then we risk another generation of under performance for our politicians. This is why we have decided to create a simple poster that everyone can print out and display in their windows, on the lamp post in their street or indeed anywhere, that will serve as a constant reminder. A reminder that it’s time we got respect from our “Right Honourables”.

Download our simple PDF and display it with pride: Download it now ››

Design is just “fluff”

15 April, 2010 (15:27) | Not work as such | By: Brian

Rather surprisingly some people still think design won’t add value to their company, that it’s therefore not worth investing in because it doesn’t matter. Not in real terms. Not in the way that a real service might, like a repair guy fixing your machinery or an accountant who saves you on your tax bill, that’s “real” value. It never fails to amaze me that some people think it’s easy, this design thing, and therefore they devalue the profession further. Sure you can buy—or get free—desktop publishing software that will let you create your own design work for your organisation, so why on earth would you want to pay for a designer to do it for you?

Perhaps I can offer a reason to recognise why a designer can be worth their weight in gold; and it’s not about a job we did, in fact I don’t even know who produced the design.

Recently I found myself dealing with something that, unfortunately, many of us will have to do at some point in our lives: deal with an undertaker. Nothing could have been further from my mind than design during this period of immense sadness. We had to choose a coffin, handles, details, plaques and so on—and yes, of course everything had been designed by someone. But even a highly tuned designer didn’t see it and only now, three years later, am I recognising the immense effort these designers made in ensuring that the process was as automated as possible.

You might think describing something as “automated” when it comes to design is a disparaging comment, but it’s a compliment. I can’t thank the designers enough for making the processes easy. You have a myriad of forms to fill out and when you’re emotionally volatile you don’t want a form to break you, yet the design of the paperwork had clearly been considered. It was a process that we were gently guided through to the point that we barely noticed we had dealt with the hardest thing I think I’ve ever had to do.

Compassion.. in a form? Would someone using a free DTP program manage that?

Grafik Magazine reviews our Original Designers Workbooks

31 March, 2010 (14:04) | News, Work | By: Brian

Last year, not long after we’d printed our 1,000 copies of the Original Designers Workbooks, we sent a few off to Grafik in the hope that they’d put them in their magazine. Alas they didn’t feel they would be right for the luscious pages of their international journal on graphics, preferring to featuring screenprints from the brilliant Anthony Burrill or some super sexy collaboration between Generation Press and Build. We understood. The ODW is a functional design—with a nice clear foil block on the cover—but essentially 200 of the 204 pages are identical. It’s not going to win a D&AD Black Pencil (well it would be amazing if it did, but we won’t put the Bolli on chill just yet).

What the Workbook does offer is a damn useful notebook/sketchbook. However, having used them in their offices for nearly a year and finding them utterly invaluable, they’ve put our Workbooks top of their “Objektified” list of the most desirable notebooks around.

http://www.grafikmag.com/index.php?m=GR&sub=GRdetail&id=378

So thanks to Dan who wrote the article and we’re chuffed you find your Workbook so valuable.

More V&A exhibitions images

25 March, 2010 (16:25) | Portfolio, Work | By: Brian

The stencil produced for the ‘materials’ wall

The ‘materials’ wall, otherwise known as the “How are seats made” section of the exhibition

The “play” section of the exhibtion

A Tripp Trapp highchair, something I will be buying for my baby thanks to discovering it during this project

Some nicely typeset Rockwell. It’s a nightmare font and every headline, and indeed much of the body text in the exhibition required kerning.

The exhibition has some interactive elements for kids, for which we produced little voting cards in this instance, so they can vote for whether the stools designed by New Bucks Uni students should go into production…

…and these ones for them to design their own seats and post them for all to see on the wall.

Details of  object labels

V&A Museum of Childhood images from the exhibition

15 March, 2010 (17:47) | News, Portfolio, Work | By: Brian

If you can’t make the time to take a trip to Bethnal Green in London’s east end before September here are a whole load of images we took at the exhibition we designed (in partnership with Wells Mackereth Architects and commissioning Emma Houlston) for the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Museum of Childhood temporary exhibtion on child seating through the ages.

















Ignite - designing a sub-brand

3 March, 2010 (14:42) | News, Portfolio, Work | By: Brian

We’ve just completed a logo design for one of our long-standing clients, Nucleus, for a new sub brand of theirs called Ignite. Taking into consideration all the factors in a sub-brand design, we’ve produced the shown logo (below). We think it’s spot on and sits perfectly into all their existing marketing material. They think it’s “absolutely brill”, which is nice.

Ignite logo

We don’t pitch, but why?

10 February, 2010 (16:20) | Not work as such | By: Brian

Here at Graphic Clinic we rarely pitch for work, in fact we’ve only done it once. More often than not we get recommended to our clients, we meet, we chat, we get to know each other, and we deliver results driven design that works for them. But there is also a commercial reason for it not pitching for work. We just don’t have the time. Plain and simple, we just don’t have the time to. We’re so busy making sure we give our existing clients a damn good creative service that if we were distracted by pitching speculatively for new work our existing clients might suffer—and we don’t want that. We’re quite sure that they won’t fancy that idea either.

“…But what if…?” I hear you say. Well if you would like to use us to design you a new website, or a brochure, or an exhibition, and you’re running a pitch for that project ask yourself a couple of key questions. Do I like what they’ve done? Do I want to talk to them? and will my pitch really give me ‘value for money’?

One day, shortly after you choose the winning agency from those who tendered, you’ll call them up looking to discuss your project and they’ll be too busy to talk to you. Why? Well they’re probably pitching for some new business.

It seems the Belgians feel the same as we found this on Twitter this week, compelling us to put our views online too. “Belgian advertising is offline this week http://www.saatchi.be” * This has now been taken offline so don’t click on the link*

Foiled invites for V&A

28 January, 2010 (18:16) | News, Work | By: Brian

V&A floied blocked invite

We’ve received copies of the invites produced for the V&A Museum of Childhood to the opening preview for the exhibition we’re working on at the V&A at the moment. The exhibition opens next Saturday (6 February) with the preview evening on the 4th. At the moment the builders are still on site and Emma Houlston the illustrator is painting some wonderful statements on the walls to inspire and engage kids. We’ll put more pictures online from the exhibition next week once the objects are in place and the painting is finished.

Twenty 10

6 January, 2010 (19:02) | News, Not work as such | By: Brian

It’s like 20:20 vision but not for another ten years. Happy New Year!