24.12.09

Life imitating thought

I’ve been chatting to my friends about a theory of ideas. The essence is that ideas shouldn’t be horded, but rather they should be set free so that more (and better) ideas fill the gaps that the others were taking up. For the last year or two I’ve been noting the ideas for projects/designs/other random thoughts in my iPod Touch, in the always handy Notes app. Handy until yesterday it crapped itself and deleted everything. So there we go, 50+ ideas that were waiting to be realised (on that infamous rainy day) vanished in a flash. I am pretty disappointed in myself for not acting sooner to
(a) back them up
(b) complete them
but excited to see if my idea is actually true and the ideas waiting in the wings come into fruition in the new year.

21.12.09

17.12.09

Come on in.


It’s always interesting doing some tiding up. Sometimes you’ll find a thing you had totally forgotten about. Like this drawing. Completely skipped my mind. Never finished, but now not forgotten.

5.12.09

The future of (interactive) magazines

Sports Illustrated has some very interesting ideas for the future of a magazine. I’ve been following/learning the development of interactivity of the pdf format (via inDesign and Acrobat) but this it something else. (watch at fullscreen for the real deal).



Via John Nack

3.12.09

Junos represents

Back in the motherland the whirlwind that was the 2009 B2B awards is settling down. It’s nice to see that Junos, a project that I branded last year while with Base One, has just won an award. Well done chaps.

2.12.09

Books come to life

Lovely work by ColensoBBDO, Auckland.

28.11.09

Help Portrait

Help Portrait is a movement of photographers who are using their time, equipment and expertise to give back to those who are less fortunate this holiday season. If you are interested in getting involved on Sunday 12 December just follow the links.
This is the poster I designed for their cause.

20.11.09

16.11.09

Think about the children

OK, it's pretty obvious really, but the people who prove things for a living have proved that “brands leave their mark on children’s brains”.
…participants were quicker to recognise brand names they had encountered from birth… participants aged between 50 and 83 years were quicker to recognise early brands over newer, current brands, even if the early brands were long since defunct… The evidence suggests that mere exposure to brands in childhood will make for more fluent recognition of those brand names in adulthood that will persist through to old age.

So what does this mean? Perhaps think about baby books, logos on bibs, and merchandise broadly if you want the little humans to feel an affinity with your brand later in life. But it is a fine line. They might just outlast you.
Via BPS.

15.11.09

More Munn

If you didn't see Jason Munn’s lecture last week, you should really visit his poster exhibition on Tory Street before 21 November.