entries Tagged as [graphic design]

Steve’s Chow-Chow

Pennsylvania Chow-Chow was a mainstay in my family.

My grandfather used to jar his own and about 15 years ago, I went in search of the Official Family Recipe.

And it turned out, no one ever wrote it down.

So I ended up questioning my mother, aunts, uncles how it was done. Pieced together what I could and whipped up a large batch.

Designed some homespun labels and sent a bunch of jars out to the family.

In my version of the recipe, I keep the veggies crisp – which I define as A California Thing. I never understood the need to make cooked vegetables come out mushy.

My grandfather’s reaction was, ‘Oh, you’ll get it right next time.’
[Read more →]

Cucumber soda design

This finally made it on my radar.

Took my first sip this evening and I’m hooked. Low sugar, DRY cucumber soda. Bought a four pack.

Complete line of sodas include vanilla bean, juniper berry, lavender, lemongrass, blood orange and rhubarb. Website here. Blog here.

Brand design by Seattle-based Turnstyle.

Moonshine design

‘Moonshine now finds its first taste of legality with a recent state law in Tennessee allowing the distillation of spirits’

Of course, the ‘first legal moonshine in Tennessee’ needs some good branding.

Ole Smoky’s script logo was designed by letterpress specialist YeeHaw – with Ole Smoky Distillery owners Jessi and Joe Baker, Cory Cottingim and Tony Breeden developing the look of the mason jar bottle, label and seal.

The team at Robin Easter Design pulls it all together with a kick ass website.

More details here. Order here.

Info provided via Whitney Hayden at Robin Easter Design; images found via The Dieline, IVI Blog and Thirstysouth

Good Ol Font

Hobo, of course, was the font of choice for Them Duke Boys (1979-85). Theme sung by Waylon Jennings.

Fontjob

Hobo font. Durex Condom ads. The work of Andrej Krahne.

Nu Amsterdam Piggly

3 little pigs shirts. By Nu Amsterdam Apparel.

Old Penney, new logo

JCPenney last ‘officially’ updated their logotype in 1971 – changing from a custom script (seen above) to Helvetica, set clean and neat (below).


1971

And last night – in a series of Academy Awards spots – jcp unveiled its new moniker (at bottom). Red box (retained from originally, their ‘it’s all inside’ campaign), lowercase helvetica, still clean and neat.

‘The winning design was provided by Luke Langhus, a third-year graphic design student at the University of Cincinnati.’

I do like when a redesign keeps the flavor of the original – here’s the official press release. Although this update does beg a few questions:

Doesn’t this look a lot like what GAP abandoned last year? And is the connection to Target’s brand a bit too obvious? And is ‘crowd sourcing’ how they went about this?

‘Participants included the Company’s associates, several design agencies and two art schools – University of Cincinnati and Rhode Island School of Design – that collectively submitted over 200 designs for consideration.’

I hope on the labor front, logo development participants were not as crowdsourced as is becoming commonplace. And it is a risky move to go this route – some could say jcp is running with what GAP chose to reject.

Though in the end, good merch behind the logo will determine what happens next. ‘What’s inside’ is still more important than not.


2011

1964 Penneys architectural drawing found via Vintage Seattle, click image to view larger, more/jump

Wiggly

Nick’s Fonts is a modest little foundry dedicated to the preservation of our rich typographic heritage’

Nick Curtis’ Quigley Wiggly free font. Just because.

Found via Sean Ireton

St Marie and St Ryde

Two type families from Sascha Timplan: St Marie and St Ryde.

Each family has one weight that retails for $0. Click the images to view/jump/download.


Melbourne

‘The intention was to create a quiet and space-saving Grotesk’

Marco Müller’s Melbourne font. Free download here.

Miso



Mårten Nettelbladt’s geometric Miso fonts. Free download here.

Production notes available at Typophile.

Also from Typophile: (below) photos of Miso in use at Milan Design Week 2009.

Found via Lori Yung


Creative Commons License

the work at the mehallo blog. beta. is licensed under a creative commons attribution - noncommercial - no derivative works 3.0 united states license.  if reposting, credit must be given to steve mehallo - and if possible, please provide a link back to the mehallo blog. beta.

i include images for the purpose of critique, review, promotion and inspiration - and always make my best effort give credit/link back to the original source.  if i’ve screwed up, please fire me a note.

page layout based on the wordpress 'darkwater theme' by antbag, adapted and redesigned by mehallo.  valuable php assistance from bill mead.