Categories
Design Journalism Language London

Guardian Adverts: still brilliant and timeless

London-based Newspaper The Guardian redesigned their print product in 2005. It won multiple awards for its use of the Berliner format along with the ease of readability, consideration of readability, flow from section to section and brilliant use of color, photography, illustration and language.

Later came the website redesign and new advert campaign. I met Creative Director Mark Porter and Special Projects Director Mark Leeds for while in London internship, research and Uni courses. More on that meeting here.

What’s most inspired is how well the redesign and team translated the print vision to their website and marketing campaigns. Nearly 10 years later, their adverts still inspire me:volumecontrolgu81

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Categories
Design

What to do with all your data; talking visualization with Sarah Nahm and Ian Johnson

Good friends Sarah Nahm and Ian Johnson came to visit me at work to talk with the design team about data viz! Read more about it here:

http://pivotallabs.com/what-to-do-with-all-your-data-talking-visualization-with-sarah-nahm-and-ian-johnnson/

Categories
Design

Apple designers – just like the rest of us

iOS7
Designers, self included, are all in a huff about the iOS 7 announcement yesterday. A curation of our rants live here: http://designerscomplaining.tumblr.com/.

Many are critiquing the aesthetic choices and departure too from their famously skeuomorphic designs. Others are upset by the color choices look saying they look too much like a children’s candyland. And many agree it looks like a pages from Windows, Android and Myspace playbooks.  Personally, I’d just like to see some consistency. In these screens alone I can count 5 different styles of icons. I like many others, agree we’ll have to see it in action to have any kind of definitive opinions.

Historically Apple ran like a creative dictatorship. Decisions were made top down and usually were quite good decisions. Many designers looked to Apple and Steve Jobs for a flashlight pointing us towards the future of design innovation. That’s what designers used to do.

But, Apple designers no longer have a direct line to god. Perhaps their new process is similar to what the rest of us have been doing all along. Prototyping. It looks something like this: 1. Design something that might work  2. put it out in the world  3. listen to what people say 4. iterate like crazy 5. ship as soon as humanly possible.

Perhaps the iOS designs look unfinished and unsure because they are. Call me crazy but is Apple user testing?

 

Categories
Design

Remote Control

It's a lemons lemonade kind of morning.Lot’s of friends asking how the new job is going. It’s going great. I dig my team and the work is challenging and interesting. I’m on kind of a weird project right now, but haven’t found the happy hour way to explain it. Here’s what I’m up to:

http://pivotallabs.com/remote-control/