Category Culture

Book Designer David Pearson

David Pearson is a London designer who while working at Penguin spearheaded the beautiful set of pocket classics that marked their 70th year. A rainbow of 70 small paperback volumes each with wildly different covers. After hearing me gush about them my sister found a way to buy a set through a London friend and get them to Montana.
IMG_7779

David Pearson gave an interview to design blog The Casual Optimist that is worth a look for the interested.

I was already an avid [Penguin book] collector and the idea for a design retrospective was one that I’d run past my Art Director before it was eventually tagged onto the company’s 70-year anniversary celebrations. I’d always wanted to get into the archives and have a really good poke around and fortunately for me, this gave me the perfect excuse. If I was unaware of the magnitude of the company’s past achievements they very quickly became apparent as I worked my way through the vast isles of books.

4091963163_afa0888b3e_b

Facts About Projection

Of course I wish there were more short films about projectionists. With letterpress operators getting all kinds of internet attention I think it’s high time that proud film projectionists make more films like this. It’s very accurate to my experiences as a projectionist at the Myrna and at Paramount, but doesn’t make any reference to one of the uncommon but memorable duties projectionists have: telling the audience that the film is unplayable because of technical difficulties. As in, it’s technically difficult to deal with two thousand plus feet of film once it’s fallen off the platter or wound itself into an intractable solid mass around the initial rollers.

There is a lot more danger involved in projection work than this guy lets on. Film is tough, but it’s not hard to ruin, and once it’s ruined it takes a long time to replace.

Via Kitsune Noir

I got an email from long time reader John Stanbury telling me I should check out a little video called Facts About Projection by a fellow named Temujin Doran. Temujin is a Projectionist in Islington in London, where he works at The Screen on the Green. It’s a really sweet video that gives you a beautiful glimpse into a dying art form. Movies have and still are shown on 35mm film around the country, but the stockpiles of these movies certainly aren’t growing.

J. Hische Letterpress Poster

P1000388I mentioned Daily Drop Cap before but now Ms. Hische has pressed her project into new territory. Namely, creamy, 100% cotton, two color letterpress territory, and it’s beautiful!

From her blog: “I hand printed these two color letterpress posters at The Arm in Williamsburg and it was The Most Painstaking Registration Process Ever. I ended up destroying my plates while trying to make it perfect, which means that this small first edition of 75 will also be the last edition.”

P1000380

H&FJ:Vitesse

vitesse-blog-artwork-1-bh

A new font family from my favorite type designers Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones was released today. They made Gotham, Obama’s campaign font.

H&FJ is delighted to introduce Vitesse®, a new slab serif in twelve styles.
Slab serifs are one of typography’s most vibrant categories, yet they remain dominated by two ancient forms: the nineteenth century Antique, and the twentieth century Geometric. Both are vital and living genres—we’ve explored each of them, in our Sentinel and Archer type families—but what of the twenty-first century slab? Vitesse revels in the tension between organic letterforms and mechanical grids, and offers designers a distinctive new voice that’s suave, confident, and stylish. Engineered for responsive handling and a sporty ride.

The Parrot Ads

AJ Broadbent—photographer, designer, sign maker—posted the Parrot newspaper ads on his often updated food blog Montana Eats. He took all the photos for the new ad campaign.  Allegra designer Marcy Vanek did the copy and layout on these.

Parrot Ad