Spring is in the air

Happy first day of Spring! (in Aussieland) oh warm weather how I’ve missed you so! I vow to enjoy your long sunny days, and breezy nights by doing the following:
Make a flower crown to put in my hair.
Wear more long flowy dresses.
Enjoy a cup of chai tea in the sunshine on my porch.
Catch up on Kinfolk volume 4 (loads of Summer gatherings to get you inspired)
Picnic in the park with friends; love nothing more than gathering with good friends and good food.
Eat watermelon, strawberries and pineapple all day long.

Kinfolk Magazine vol.4

Perhaps you’ve heard about a new magazine that has been popping up around the blogosphere called Kinfolk.
Every blog I visited I kept seeing the name, until my curiosity got the better of me and I had to check it out. Kinfolk magazine manifesto is described as:

Kinfolk is a growing community of artists with a shared interest in small gatherings. We recognize that there is something about a table shared by friends, not just a wedding or once-a-year holiday extravaganza, that anchors our relationships and energizes us. We have come together to create Kinfolk as our collaborative way of advocating the natural approach to entertaining that we love.
Every element of Kinfolk—the features, photography, and general aesthetics—are consistent with the way we feel entertaining should be: simple, uncomplicated, and less contrived. Kinfolk is the marriage of our appreciation for art and design and our love for spending time with family and friends.
The joy of small gatherings is something I can relate to; I love cooking lunch for friends or gathering together after work for a meal. I find it to be a necessary way to keep in touch outside of our lives through our phones and computers. Kinfolk of course is not like every other entertaining magazine. It is the type of mag you read on a sunny afternoon with a cup of tea, and takes the Martha Stewart out of dinner party.

Volume 4 focuses on the traditions we create during Summer. My childhood Summer memories were good and bad. The bad was being stuck in a BBQ with my parents’ friends on a scorching hot Summer day, being sticky and lathered in sunscreen and insect repellent and to be served up a dry slab of steak. The good memories went something like this: going fishing with dad at some random location which involves climbing down rocky surfaces to find rock pools filled with all sorts of fascinating sea creatures. I poked and prodded every shell and scooped up dead jellyfish to show my mother whilst she sat in the shade away from the squawking seagulls attacking my dad’s fishing bait.

The contributors to Kinfolk are an array of writers, photographers, designers and the like who already have a presence online with their blogs. Kinfolk cleverly gathered these like minded creatives to put together what essentially is an amazing magazine with 138 pages filled with writing that recounts memories, documents unrecorded moments and photography that makes you yearn for Summer so that you can start creating your own traditions and memories with friends and family.

 

Pinterest

After receiving a a Pinterest invite I didn’t sign up straight away because to become a member you have to sign in with your Facebook or twitter account, which I have neither. I love blogging and social bookmarking sites, but social networking just isn’t my thing, so alas I figured I could use someone else’s Facebook account to sign up then unlink their profile so you can login via email.

Once I started pinning, I was hooked. Before the days of social bookmarking sites I’d just right click and save images onto my desktop, the problem with this is that you can not source where you got the image from and it tends to just disappear in a folder and never to be seen again. I actually use several bookmarking sites like Tumblr and Designspiration, but my taste in things from fashion to architecture varies greatly, and I like to keep these things in separate categories so my collection of images are more coherent.

If you would like to follow me elsewhere you can find me at:
Tumblr: This is where I post all my fashion inspiration – dark, avant garde, draping, and structural fashion.
Designspiration: Graphic design inspiration.
Pinterest: This is where my girly granny side comes out, I pin things from craft, lettering, stationery, home interiors, and food.

Nailmania: Mermaid nails

I never understood why Ariel from The Little Mermaid ever wanted to be a human, the way I see it, it is SO much more fun being a mermaid! think about it, you can have ridiculous unattainable luscious fire-red hair, wear seashell bras and have talking pet crabs and fish.

EDIT 02: EDGE COLOUR

01 / 02 / 03 / 04 / 05 / 06 / 07 / 08/ 09

Adding some edge colour is one of those little add-on effects to pimp up your collateral,and it can make any boring black and white card look a little bit more spesh. I love a good edge colour, I plan on making some DIY cards for my next batch and add some edge colour to a monochromatic design. Perhaps mint or turquoise? If all else fails, neon pink always looks amazing.

Semi-permanent 2012


I attended Semi-permanent this week, and it was an inspirational and awesome two days, here are some advice, insight and thoughts from some of the speakers:

BENJA HARNEY/PAPER ENGINEER: Importance of passion and drive to be successful.
Before the popularity of the paper craft boom; paper engineer was a rather obscure job title. Benja goes to show if you care about your craft and put in the time to see things through it pays off, as evident in his Hermes store window project which involved meticulously cutting out paper feathers to create wings.

KELLI ANDERSON/GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Making design = making experience.
Design is completed by audience interaction; it is not a solo activity. I think Kelli makes a very valid point that a lot of students forget at times. Design is a commodity; a successful final result usually entails a thorough understanding of your audience in social and environmental contexts. People come to design with an expected outcome, as designers we have the power to shape and engineer that experience.

BEC PARSONS AND BART CELESTINO/PHOTOGRAPHY: You don’t have to be original, just genuine.
The importance of originality is often put on a pedestal.  It is pretty safe to say nothing is original these days, only original reinterpretations. Bec and Bart were over the over-polished magazine editorials where the main focus was selling the product. They wanted to do something for themselves and get back to the root of what inspires them. Rather than capturing a product they wanted a rawness to their photography, and with that they published LOVE WANT, a magazine born out of shooting photos they wanted, mostly about emotion and feeling. The magazine was not about making money, just an outlet for them to be creative in their own right. Bec goes on to say even creative industries don’t allow creative freedom anymore, everything is commercial. I think sometimes in our 9-5 creative jobs we get caught up in meeting client deadlines and budgets, and it is important to set time aside to explore your own creative endeavours.

MEGGS/ARTIST: Any opportunity you’re afraid of you should take it.
Whatever happens, it’s not a failure; you will always gain something from it.

DEREK HENDERSON/PHOTOGRAPHER: Communicate your ideas across everyone on your team.
This is extremely important when working in teams, it is so crucial that everyone you’re working with is on the same page as you about concept, ideas, and delivery of final outcome, it not only saves time but collaborating with others opens doors to creating possibilities you couldn’t do on your own, as a result, the final outcome is more refined and complete.

MEIRION PRITCHARD/ WALLPAPER* MAGAZINE: Print is not dead.
Print magazines still have a future, it is about creating a magazine for a niche with good solid content. No one needs mass produced gossip in hard copy when you can get access to it quicker online. I’ve always been a bit of a magazine junkie, but definitely selective about the ones I buy, and more often than not, I buy them for good articles that I can’t find online. There’s just something nice about taking 20 minutes of your day to wind down with an engaging magazine article and admire the layout rather than scrolling down on my screen.

LUCA IONESCU/TYPOGRAPHER: Be proactive.
You can give clients more than they expect if you’re really into your work and you are being proactive without hindering your work timeline and adding bonuses (eg: an extra mock-up design), it shows you care about the project and are giving the client more bang for their buck they will want to work with you again.
This is something I’ve always naturally done, whether it was for a uni project or client work. Not only is the client happy that I’ve added a bonus, it makes me happy too, because I like to think I’ve put in 110% in everything that I do. It is always better than thinking “I could have tried harder.”

VINCE FROST/FROST DESIGN: Retrigger senses and emotions.
Designers have the ability to play with people’s emotions, if you’re designing an identity for a location it is useful to look at the history of the place and pull inspiration from that. However don’t stick to one thing, gather from as many sources as possible. You want to trigger notions and ideas about something when someone looks at a design piece, instead of just seeing the obvious clichés.

BEC WINNEL/ILLUSTRATOR: Put your portfolio everywhere.
Especially if you’re a freelancer, with so many free online portfolio sites and communities now, it is so easy to set one up. You don’t have to stick to one platform, putting your work up on multiple sites and utilising social media is the easiest way to gain exposure, but don’t spam people because that is annoying. If your work is good, it will be noticed.

DAVID ALAN HARVEY/PHOTOGRAPHER:  You don’t want a standing ovation.
As designers you should always be striving to learn new things and better yourself, you do not want to be honoured­­, because that means it is all over, you want to constantly be pushing yourself and pissing people off.

FLORIAN SHMITT/HI RES: You always know something works and is successful when kids love it.
Good design shouldn’t have to be explained, even if the idea is conceptual. Place the idea above everything and keep it simple and memorable.

GMUNK/MOTION GRAPHICS: Collect references and keep it organised!
I’m quite guilty of right clicking inspirational images and just saving them to some unknown vortex of my computer and never to see them again. I find using websites like Tumblr, Pinterest and designspiration works well in organising and sourcing my imagery and having them available  anywhere I want.

THREE MONKEYS/ADVERTISING: Naivety serves you well.
You don’t have to know how to do everything, you don’t have to know where you’re going. Sometimes just knowing you want to do something is all you need. Now go create!

♥ BC

2012 typography trends

 

This week I attended Australian Infront’s Typecast talk. Luca Ionescu (Like Minded Studio) was accompanied by Gemma O’brien, Keith Morris and Wayne Thompson (Australian Type Foundry) to discuss the process of creating typefaces and letterforms and the future of typography. For those of us who are type enthusiasts a typeface can be the key to bringing a project together to perfection, but a bad typeface can just as easily make you run away from any shop that has its store name set in Comic Sans. There’s no doubt creating a typeface (complete with glyphs and punctuation) is a timely process where typographers intensely labour over every detail making sure every component fits together uniformly. These days however, there are free websites that allow anyone to create their own font and a plethora of font foundries to choose from, but where do you draw the line between a good typeface and a really bad one?

Typography these last 5 years has seen a resurgence of decorative lettering and much more illustrative rather than creating type for bodies of text. A common trend seen in typography today favours the old hand crafted look, as type connoisseur Erik Spiekermann perfectly puts it:

The state of typography has always been a good indicator of the general state of affairs. The trends were all pointing back in time, pastiche being the operative word, nostalgia the main trend.

I think it’s safe to say typography will always be typography; it’s the medium in which it is presented that changes. Although the current trend points back in time to nostalgic hand scripted lettering, it is being presented on print and screen, the next stepping stone will perhaps see type more heavily influenced by moving image and animation, which of course adds a whole new dimension. The way letters appear and transition will become an integral part of the design process. I personally love hand crafted print work, so for now I am going to enjoy the revival of letterpress and hand drawn calligraphy.

 

♥ BC

Nailmania: Aztec

The aztec trend is popping up everywhere in fashion this season, but I decided to add a bit of tribal fun on my nails instead. Nail foils by Nail Rock.

♥ BC

EDIT #01: unwrapped

Hi lovelies, I’ve decided on a few new columns I will be regularly posting on this blog , so welcome to numero uno of EDIT. Being a creative person I naturally like to hoard things, especially images (which is the sole reason my computer is so slow) so I decided to share some of the things that I am currently obsessing over. EDIT will showcase my favourite design details across graphics, fashion, interiors and the like.


source: 

UNWRAPPED: who doesn’t like a good unveiling? there’s nothing quite as enticing as a mystery parcel all neatly wrapped up only to reveal some tantalising typography porn! (can you tell I’m really into type?)

source:

♥ BC

Lettering: Pink Lou Lou

Some time ago I created some custom hand drawn type for jewellery label Pink Lou Lou. The brief was to illustrate a series of quotes that were quirky and synonymous with the brand. The illustrations were meant to be printed on cards and related collateral, but I noticed one of my drawings on the website too! I can’t wait to get some samples of the printed stock!

I really enjoy doing custom lettering, I hope to work on some more projects of a similar nature soon!

♥ BC