entries Tagged as [illustration]

Edward Johnston, reinterpreted

Edward Johnston (1872-1944) developed the ‘look’ of the London Underground – thru type and image.

These are snaps of the work of student Grady Fike. Grady spent eleven weeks jumping thru many hoops in my experimental typography course at The Art Institute of California Sacramento.

For the class, I’ve set up an evolving work process – where students are assigned a ‘famous typographer’ (one that I pick, so they have to work within these limitations) and interpret their work thru both loose and strict design iterations.

It’s similar to Project Runway, but for much of it, students often only have about an hour to produce their work. And based on the outcome, their solutions dictate what the next homework assignment will be. It’s all very fluid. [Read more →]

Red and blue: The London Underground ‘bullseye’

One of the first modern icons of the 20th century, The London Underground’s ‘bullseye’ passed the 100 year mark recently – and to celebrate, 100 artists were brought in to interpret the symbol and its legacy. [Read more →]

Red, in 90 seconds

Vintage poster by Abram Games for The London Underground.

Found via Martin Klasch

That’s the study of maps

‘We hairy. We mope. We doodle for spare change.’

Four of seven covers for Belgium-based Weekend Knack. By Khuan Cavemen Co.

Photostream here.

Found via MonsieurBandit

Dilill

The work of Dilill. Creative blog here, Twitter here.

Gift to White House: Ben Eine’s graffiti typography


Ben Eine: Twenty First Century City, spray paint and black gloss on canvas

‘Ben Eine (real name Ben Flynn) is a street artist in London who has recently gained a whole lot of recognition in the states. British Prime Minister David Cameron presented his work to President Barack Obama for his first official visit to the U.S.’ –Global Grind

Article here. Check out Eine’s official site here.

Found via Chank Diesel

Letterman

‘Stronger than silent e, able to leap capital T in a single bound’

Before David Letterman had a show, I used to watch Letterman.

Joan Rivers narrated the Letterman spots with Gene Wilder as the voice of the hero.

These shorts were from the original Electric Company (1972-77), which was the coolest childrens show ever. Even had Morgan Freeman, Rita Moreno, Mel Brooks and Spider-man.

And
In an odd jump back to my childhood, Libby the Kid and The Electric Company ended up influencing some of the design stuff I’ve done for Normandie.

Chevron dinos

Hm.

In the 1970s, Chevron ran animated spots highlighting our good ‘friends’ the dinosaurs whose fossils power our vehicles. Here’s an ‘alternative energy’ spot (above) from 1978.

Chevron also used to employ really tiny mechanics that could climb inside and rubberize your car (below).

And
In 1960, we used to drive around in bubble-domed spaceships (powered by Chevron Surpreme, of course):

Buzzzzzzzzz

Vintage VW Beetle spot.

31

Also as a kid, I had a small stack of these flyers: The official Baskin-Robbins 31 flavors list, changed out monthly, available at the counter.

And Daiquiri Ice was my favorite. The allure of drinking without the drinking.

Found via So Much Pileup.

Libby the Kid

By far, these were the coolest tee vee dinners of the 1970s.

I used to be able to draw the Kid quite well and still have a 3D mug premium sitting around here somewhere.


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