50/50 Project

News

50/50 is a collaborative experiment, a platform of 50 little bets: digital projects created and run by individuals and teams of makers. Each project aims to engage a network of supporters to help spread the word and generate as much money for famine aid as possible.

Launched in August, 50 projects in 50 days is an innovative way to raise £1 million for famine relief in East Africa through graphic design. Already signed up to the campaign are such names as Mint Digital, Because Studio, Jack & Paul and Enjoy This.

A seemingly impossible challenge first hatched by Good for Nothing and Made by Many, 50/50 is open to everyone. Whatever you decide to do, do something. All funds go directly to UNICEF.

It’s a fantastically original way to give a little back through precious time and talent. Some of the projects include the design and build of #AfricaNeedsYou: A website that targets celebrities who tweet brand endorsements for cash. The platform lets you send prewritten tweets, urging each celebrity to donate to the cause and tweet support. And #f*ckfamine SwearJar; an application to track your swearing on Twitter, and tweet you a weekly bill. A dashboard to gamify profanity, encouraging people to swear for Africa.

Support the campaign on both Instagram and Twitter; @5050good or get involved in a collaboration or project of your own.

5050

 

Hey Studio {Barcelona}

Awesome agencies

With the profound conviction that good design means combining content, functionality, graphic expression and strategy… Hey Studio are my kind of people! A bold style with confident use of colours yet keeping things simple and true to their messages.

moodley {Austria}

Awesome agencies

Presenting a beautifully crafted portfolio, moodley seemingly offer all the benefits of a small bespoke agency however manage to operate over 2 different locations and will a full arsenal of 28 full-time staff from seven countries. Moodley have a strong focus on strategic branding, consulting and just generally good honest crafted design.

 

Diet Coke, now with added logo

News

We’ve all been there; head firmly slapped into hands as the client phones through “yeh, I really like what you’ve done here but uh, can you make the logo bigger”. Against your better judgement, you duly oblige. “Great yeh, um, bit bigger again…” and it goes on, until the only thing to satisfy them is seeing what was once a beautifully balanced layout dominated by their identity.

Well, it may be of some comfort to know that Turner Duckworth are not exempt from this posturing with their recent limited edition repackaging of long-time client Diet Coke. Only with them it turns out looking awesome. And I dare say it was probably their idea. And will probably win many, many awards.

diet coke breakdiet coke breakdiet coke break

 

Wood Type Revival

News

Get your font junkie self over to newly-launched Wood Type Revival (site designed by the awesome Bearded), purveyors of rare historic wood type, lovingly digitising them for the modern designer. There are some real corkers in there and we’ll be checking back to their blog in earnest anticipation of seeing great examples in action, particularly now it’s been announced the foundry is available on Typekit. (Roycroft is a personal favourite, incase you’re asking).

Tw. @woodtyperevival

WTRWTRWTRWTR

 

Katie Quinn Davies {Sydney}

Photographers

Katie Quinn Davies is a talented photography based in Sydney, Australia via Dublin, Ireland. After retraining as a commercial photographer you can see the designer at heart with the compositions and angles she creates. Katie not only has a full body of work to complete a comprehensive portfolio, she also pursues her passion for food in her spare time on the award winning blog What Katie Ate.

Junior designers are not rock stars

Jottings

It’s an age old adage that when a small agency hires new staff, it isn’t simply talent and portfolios that are being gauged during the recruitment process. It’s critical that the personality is one that slots in comfortably with the existing blend of characters in the studio. This is only exagerated when looking to hire a young designer or graduate as they will invariably need the most guidance and the most time dedicated to them by more senior staff to help them learn their trade and mold them to compliment the existing house style.

I know a few moderately large agencies who only employ younger, inexperienced designers to ensure continuity and management of house style. But that’s not what I want to discuss.

Just this week a good friend of mine had a fresh out of Uni and spritely 21 year old designer come in for a weeks placement. The agency itself is vibrant and has some great accounts on both a local and national scale and the placement was, to all intents and purposes, a precursor to being offered a fulltime position to augment their web design team. Now, this is a busy studio and this particular week the young designer was tasked with helping the senior designer produce elements of artwork for a soon to launch and high profile website. Not the most glamorous nor creative job granted but a necessary and straight forward task nonetheless.

Now, don’t get me wrong, this girl was talented enough. She had to be to get through the door. But by her own admission needed to learn what it was to be a commercial designer. She needed to learn discipline, structure, workflow, style and the basic rules of design and studio life. She was a member of a design team now and not a student asked to go off and respond to a brief.

You would have thought she’d have lapped it up – eager and hungry to grasp her chance, an opportunity to harvest talent and experience from designers who’d been there, done it and established a reputation for themselves. So at the end of week, over a spot of lunch she was casually asked if she’d enjoyed the week. “Not really” came the response “it’s not for me”. Fair enough by all accounts but when pressed as to what she didn’t enjoy it became clear she had expected to come into the studio and be a lead designer on a project from the off.

Now I’m not saying that all young designers are not capable of picking up the mantle in this manner right away, indeed in many agencies this raw creativity is encouraged and countless revered companies have started with little more than a song in their heart and whistle in their step, straight out of education. But what she didn’t appreciate is those particular employment opportunities are few and far between and the openings that exist, are scrapped over to the death.

My point is that young designers coming out into the big bad world need to do their time. Find a themselves mentor, listen, watch, learn and grow. I liken it to being a Russian doll but in reverse; no matter how much talent you’re blessed with, you start out small but the more go you through your fledgling career you grow and add layers to your skill set; understanding and experience. It’s only when you’ve paid your dues and thoroughly learnt your craft that you’re truly capable of tackling a project and doing a brief, and a paying client’s business, justice.

So, to summise; young guns – keep it holstered until you learn how to hold it, and most of all, at 21, what’s the rush? Comments welcomed…