Friday, December 08, 2006

Convertible CD Cover

http://www.commarts.com/CA/interactive/cai04/
Package design, 2004
Sagmeister, Inc. (New York, New York)
(2005) 365: AIGA Year in Design 26

This cover is for an album by the Austrian analog/digital musician Hans Platzgummer. I love the way the designers used the inherent shape of a CD-Case to create a whimsical iconography. A minimum amount of circles is employed to create the illusion of an imaginary underwater creature; the use of primary colors enhances the simplicity of the geometric shapes.

Insects and Spiders, Oh My!

http://designarchives.aiga.org/
Illustration, 1999
U.S. Postal Service
(2000) 365: AIGA Year in Design 21

Commisioned by the US Postal Service, these series of 20 stamps are not only beautifully illustrated, but intelligently executed as well. By using artfully placed shadows and arranging the images so that they overlapped the adjoining stamps, the creepers seem to be crawling on the paper. The vibrant colors add to the sense of motion, so that the stamps are visually appealing both as a grid and as individual compositions.

Color in Motion CD-ROM

http://www.commarts.com/CA/interactive/cai04/
Interactive Annual 10: Color in Motion

In order to appreciate this MFA thesis on color, please visit the slide show posted on the Interactive Annual Website (2004). This innovative and interactive CD_ROM uses universal icons, playful animation, and fun music to illustrate properties of color and how they relate to the natural world. The designer broaches a complex subject in a clear, entertaining manner.

Chicago Chocolate Co.


http://www.commarts.com/ca/exhibit/103006/
Chicago Chocolate Co. in-store posters
Frank Dattalo, art director/designer/illustrator
Mike Roe, writer
Frank Dattalo/Mike Roe, creative directors
Marty Orzio, executive creative director
Communcation Arts Archive

Chicago agency Energy BBDO took inspiration in scientific studies that have linked women's need for chocloate with physiological causes. This humorous parody of medical illustrations
depict the reaction of a female brain when a piece of chocolate is being eaten. Great '50s-type illustration enhances the mood, as it alludes to the era's educational videos.

Alphabets Packaging


http://designarchives.aiga.org/
(2000) 365: AIGA Year in Design 21
Package Design, 1999
Lisa Billard Design (New York, New York)

Billing themselves as a “modern general store,” Alphabets houses a diverse collection of toys, books and ephemera. Playing off of Alphabets’ name, an illustrative style reminiscent of children’s “learn­to­read” flash cards represents the store’s vast range of products and its whimsical attitude. Keeping in mind the low cost of many items sold in the store, all packaging needed to be relatively inexpensive. Artwork was created that would not only not suffer by inexpensive reproduction, but would be enhanced by it.

I am Charlotte Simmons

http://designarchives.aiga.org/
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design 27
Book Design, 2005

This beautifully designed book echoes the innocence, strength, and beauty of Tom Wolfe's heroin. The filigree design in the background is an apt contrast to the simplicity of the curvilinear figure and sans sarif typography depicted in the foreground.

ABC



http://designarchives.aiga.org/
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design 27
Book Design, 2005

Hurricane Poster Project


http://designarchives.aiga.org/
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design 27
Promotional design and advertising, 2005
Laurie DeMartino Design Co. (Minneapolis, Minnesota)

Nestea Ice Tea Website




http://www.commarts.com/CA/interactive/cai06/
Interactive Annual 12: Nestea Ice (Winner Advertising Category)

The Nestea ICE microsite combines extremely detailed illustration with quirky viral video content, all unified by a Monty Pythonesque style of animation and sound. The attention to detail in all aspects of the project, from sound design to interactivity, seems as though it probably reflects both the fun and passion the developers must have had for the project. The more you watch, the more you're immersed.

Hifana Wamono Music Video



Comment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWHbORS_7iE
designarchives.aiga.org
(2006) 365:AIGA Year in Design 27 (56/179)

Please follow above link to fully appreciate this a celebration of Nippon culture and identity. Wamono is a music video that explores Japanese music, folklore, identity, art and technology, reinterpreting them as a contemporary hybrid expression of Japanese history. Originally made as a promotional video for the music of HIFANA (a Japanese music company), the video utilizes an ukiyo-e like style, but with unconventional and strange characters. This unusually unique pictorial world ends with a party inside a huge fish's stomach, what more could anybody want?.

Little Monsters


http://designarchives.aiga.org
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design. 27 (46/179)

Mocking Birdies



http://designarchives.aiga.org
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design. 27 (128/179)
Book Design, 2005

This deceptively simple children’s book, depicts a blue and a red bird imitating each other’s actions and “speech.” The lines are also staggered, so the colors and layout work in harmony with its jazzy meter. Eventually, the two birds join up, chirping purple lyrics, until a purple bird joins them as their songs spread this way and that across the page. Even the wires where they perch become bars of music. Annette Simon’s minimalist style makes the most of a few simple shapes and primary colors surrounded by ample white space. The way the figures appear on the page is echo the book's musicality, with their own visual rhythm.

Dry Soda Bottles


http://designarchives.aiga.org
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design. 27 (42/179)

Mad Science


Mad Science in the Imperial City
http://designarchives.aiga.org
(2006) 365: AIGA Year in Design. 27 (123/179)
Book Design, 2005

This is an extraordinary design for an engaging book. Mad Science in Imperial City, by Shanxing Wang, relates the experience of someone who left China after the Tiananmen Square massacre to settle in the U.S. The book is divided into four linked sections of poetic prose that draw both from the lyric and novel tradition; it utilizes scientific diagrams, mathematical equations, lists, and even a menu from an imagined Poetry Auction. All of this is integrated seamlessly by the designers, as can be seen in the jacket depicted above.

Creepcakes