my brother ROCKS!

My brother Marc is an amazing musician and guitar/amp genius. Yamaha has recognized his talents by asking him to demo their cool new amp, the THR10.

From the Yahama website

"The go-to guy for anything guitar-related in LA, Marc's credits include Daughtry (Marc's THR5 made it on to the latest record!), Kelly Clarkson, Black Stone Cherry, Theory of a Deadman, Creed, Adam Lambert, Papa Roach and 3 Doors Down and he's as likely to be found modding an amp or building a pedalboard as he is tracking an amazing guitar part or finding the perfect guitar sound for a hit record with his awesome collection of amps (a small part of which can be seen in the background of the video). Suffice to say, what he doesn't now about tone isn't really worth knowing...

And don't be fooled by the collection of incredible amps and outboard in the control room at Bay 7 Studios, everything you can hear was done using only what comes in the THR box (apart from the laptop and guitars)."

You can download the track that Marc recorded here. The product design is cool, too.

Musée des possibles

photos by Melissa Mongiat"A giant aquarium were you could swim and also see the swimmers from outside.""A forest of multicoloured balloons all year round, winter and summer."

Montréal, 30 May 2010: On a Sunday morning, the Museum of Possibilities (Musée des possibles) was created as an invitation for the public to take ownership of a new public space in the city’s Quartier des spectacles. People were asked to share what they would like to see, do, or who they would like to meet in this space—and together explore all possibilities. 

Read more incredibly interesting projects by the project conceptualizers and collaborators "Living in Our Time" here.

{discovered via Happiness Is...} (thanks, Erin, for the link that got me there)

Pinterest

Source: riazzoli.blogspot.com via kate spade new york on Pinterest

Since I was busy getting the mini party set up, I missed all but the keynote speaker on Friday's Alt Summit lineup. I was very disappointed to have missed so much of Friday's content. Alas. Anyway, the keynote was "How Pinterest Became The Next Game Changer" by founder Ben Silbermann. I have had a Pinterest account for some time, but I haven't used it too much. Mostly from internet overload coupled with lack of time. I also tend to keep my big inspiration files private in Evernote. (I don't want to spoil future content musings for my magazine subscribers!) However, I can see the benefit in using Pinterest as a social and promotion tool and I do like the embed feature, which makes putting things like this pretty image, above, onto the blog quick and easy.

It was amusing to hear Ben's somewhat scattered and unplanned venture into online media, though I have to admit that I'm still a bit perplexed by the standing ovation he received. The presentation also neglected to explain how the site and its staff are supported and the very first question from the floor was to that effect. (The answer? Venture capital. But he wouldn't divulge how they intend to grow the company or sustain the service.)

Here are some varying perspectives on Pinterest: Life-changing. Questioning the hype. What's the deal with Pinterest?

I think how Pinterest could be really useful and engaging for me and the UPPERCASE community of readers is if we had communal boards of inspiration. You could show me what inspires you, your interests, the trends that you're seeing and participating in, things that you think would be of interest to other UPPERCASE readers or for magazine content... I've long thought of setting up something like this in Tumblr, but perhaps Pinterest would be more appropriate...

Would this interest you? Which platform would you prefer? Please put your responses in the comments like this, your preferred platform, followed by your username or Pinterest/Tumblr url:

yes, Pinterest  http://pinterest.com/uppercasemag

or

yes, Tumblr  http://uppercasemagazine.tumblr.com

I've also started a board where I'm pinning images taken by UPPERCASE readers and contributors of the magazine inself. Pinterest seems like a good way to collect all those instagrams and twitter pictures that I come across. The board is called "UPPERCASE, by you."

 

Textiles: Clara Vuletich at Harvest

images from the Harvest blog
There's an intriguing collaboration going on down under: Clara Vuletich (profiled on one of the early issues of the magazine) has spending time at Harvest Textiles this month.

The residency will explore the concept of 'local textiles’. Clara hopes to combine her knowledge of sustainable textile print and dye processes with her interest in new forms of design and community activity that promote ‘home-grown’ knowledge/skills and encourage well-being.

"We live in a globalised world where most of our clothing, textiles and objects are made abroad and we are disconnected to the making of most of the products in our lives," says Clara. "How can we re-connect? The idea of ‘local’ has gained prominence in most urban cities with slow food, farmers markets, the sprouting of an urban agriculture movement and the re-emergence of independent retailers and companies, who offer us trust, loyalty and a sense of community. But what does this mean for textiles?"

(I'm excited to receive a package from Harvest to feature in issue #13.)

The Limner + Lisa Congdon + A Collection a Day


Just spotted some great photos of Lisa Congdon's studio on The Limner, a photography project profiling creatives (who are seeking Kickstarter backing).

(Lisa' book, A Collection a Day, that I designed and published would be an excellent gift! just sayin'!)

 

The book comes packaged in a special collector's tin!

 

 


 

To order your copy visit our online shop.

This book is also available in our UPPERCASE Book Bundle: all four of our recent publications including The Elegant Cockroach (October 2010), Work/Life 2: the UPPERCASE directory of international illustration (February 2011), A Collection a Day (March 2011) and The Suitcase Series Volume 2: Dottie Angel (August 2011). Save on the overall price as well as shipping when you order the bundle!

 

#11: Grateful for all the connections

photo: Jacqueline Jaszka

Photographer Jacqueline Jaszka has a great photography project called The Local Creators in which she documents the artisans and makers in her San Francisco community. When planning a feature about 3Fish Studios, also in San Francisco, I discovered that Jacqueline had already shot everything I would want in a feature about this printmaking and illustration studio. Her images capture great detail as well as broader studio shots—and her portraits of this husband and wife creative duo are warm and endearing.

Thank you Jacqueline, Annie and Eric!


Read about 3Fish Studios in the current issue #11 of UPPERCASE.

DesignThinkers: Chip Kidd (!!!!)

Photo from RGD Ontario

I've been a fan of Chip Kidd's book cover design for a long time. But I must say that Mr. Chip Kidd, presenter, is also entertaining and amusing and complex—and more flamboyant! The first half of his presentation was funny, affected and full of ATTITUDE.

Case in point, on design for printed books:

photo by Allison Toohey"Creative people should have a mantra, something to provide peace and solace in times of stress..." he advised. Expecting some wise words, the audience listened attentively. Kidd shared his mantra: "Oh my god! this is an F*ing nightmare!" We all laughed, realizing that we all have our own version of this exclamation that we utter to ourselves during the frustrating times.

Photo from RGD OntarioHe then elaborated with a detailed story involving a long line for KFC, a greasy cashier and a man ordering three buckets of chicken and how it resulted in a new mantra...

Photo from RGD OntarioKidd dotted his presentation with words like "rapidograph", "photostat" and "Quark", playing up his persona as an old school designer. His hairstyle, glasses and cardigan were also suitably old school (or at least mid-nineties). The second half of his presentation chronicled the development of his dream project: to write an original Batman comic which is slated for release sometime next year.

Chip Kidd was a tough act to follow, especially for the gentlemen of Chermayeff and Geismar who appeared quite tired for their keynote address which closed day one of presentations.

DesignThinkers: Rei Inamoto

Photo from RDG Ontario

Keynote speaker Rei Inamoto is chief creative officer at AKQA, a firm that creates campaigns for big media spenders Nike, Visa, Xbox and others. His presentation was broadly on fostering an innovative creative culture. "Innovation is what keeps you relevant in the business and creative landscape of the 21st century," he contends. "It is the culture, not process, of a company that makes innovation happen."

With the digital and social options provided by today's media, advertising (or the delivery of any creative or commercial or community message) can be enhanced by 'story doing' rather than the traditional 'story telling'. Involving the reader yields greater results.

Inamoto's five points in designing a culture of innovation:

  1. Do what wasn't possible 5 years ago.
  2. Solve an obvious problem in an unexpected way or solve an unexpected problem in an obvious way.
  3. Specialization is the enemy of innovation.
  4. If you can't find a way, make one.
  5. You need three types of people on your team: a hacker (builder/coder), a hustler (business/sales person) and a hipster (creative)



Fun quote that Inamoto left on the screen at the end of his presentation was from Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys: "Lick the lollipop of mediocrity once and you'll such forever."

DesignThinkers: Robert Wong

Robert Wong's presentation was my favourite presentation; his was mix of personal story and professional fulfillment. His keynote was "Crap I Think About At Google: 50 mins of random thoughts about life, love, work, happiness, HTML5, and a better world through creativity." To label anything Wong is doing at Google 'crap' is a completely inappropriate (but in keeping with the crass language that most of the keynote speakers enjoyed delivering). Executive Creator at Google Creative Labs, his job description seems quite open to whatever he wants to make of it. When Google came calling to hire him, he likened the experience to a spaceship landing in his backyard… he couldn't not go in and see where it took him.

He spoke of "highjacking the 7 trillion", a reference to the amount of money spent globally on marketing and advertising. At Google, Wong has the ability to harness a nice chunk of those funds and channel them to worthwhile endeavours—projects that promote art, community, awareness—while promoting the Google vision. The journey with Google has yielded some amazing work, which I will share here in links and video.

Some points from Wong's presentation:

  • job = necessary to feed your family
  • career = feeds your ego
  • calling = feeds your soul by giving job, meaning and delight
  • what does a better world look like? look at a 3 meter radius around yourself and start there
  • happy wife = happy life
  • 5:1 formula for a happy marriage (5 good things for every negative)
  • the element of surprise (S!) is the secret cheater formula, increasing the points in a positive action
  • S! = (empathy + creativity) divided by expectations
  • use the tools available to us as designers (photoshop, web, etc) to mockup the future
  • you will be happy in your work when you help someone or delight someone


Wong used the video spots to great emotional effect; when his talk ended one could hear the sounds of rustling kleenexes and sniffling noses.


Google Art Project



Chrome Experiments (requires Google's browser Chrome)

It Gets Better

Google Chrome ad

Google Chrome ad that aired during the Superbowl

DesignThinkers: George Lois

The first full day of the DesignThinkers conference in Toronto's Metro Convention Centre has wrapped (though I'm certain that many attendees are living it up at the conference party—my style was sushi with Glen and Finley and now back at the hotel). I have heard such great things about the Design Thinkers conference over the years and the first day did not disappoint. Thank you so much to the Alberta Magazine Publishers Association for the bursary that has facilitated this trip out east.

To promote UPPERCASE magazine, I donated 500 magazines and copies of Work/Life 2 to the event. For a small indie publisher, to give away this quantity of merchandise is a very big deal so I was happy to see so many scoop them up—they were gone so quickly! I hope people will be inspired enough by experiencing the magazine in person that they will be inclined to support future issues and subscribe. Thank you to Hilary, Michelle and the helpers at the event for helping to coordinate this giveaway and for lugging boxes!

The day's keynote presentations were bookended by some "elder statesment" from design and advertising's wild teenage years of the sixties and punctuated with younger generations for whom social media marketing is the new currency.

 

KEYNOTE 1: GEORGE LOIS

image from Electrric Bloom

Much to his dislike, George Lois is often introduced as "the original mad man" in reference to the popular television program. Lois was indeed a driving creative force of Madison Avenue advertising and design in the sixties; his official bio calling him "a pioneer of the landmark Creative Revolution in American Advertising." His iconic Esquire covers set the benchmark for all art directors who followed him. His phrase "I want my MTV" helped launch a new era in broadcasting. The success of his professional output merits the accolades. Time (and ego) have bestowed a reverence towards him. And perhaps this also entitles him to be an opinionated curmudgeon—the persona makes for an entertaining presentation. When an old guy swears and calls people "schmucks", it gets laughs.

Some George Lois words of wisdom, paraphrased from my notes:

  • be a graphic communicator: create big ideas not just designs
  • if there is no meaning to your work there is no meaning to your life
  • treat words with reverence: equate words and design to the words and music in a song
  • using a computer does not equal a big idea
  • intuition can be more important than intellect
  • strive to defeat habit; originality should win
  • there's a big idea in everything you do

(Read his books for his own way with words.)

Lois' presentation ended with a rant about Mad Men that was originally published in an issue of Playboy:

[Mad Men] is nothing more than a soap opera set in a glamorous office where stylish fools hump their appreciative, coiffured secretaries, suck up martinis and smoke themselves to death as they produce dumb, lifeless advertising – oblivious to the inspiring civil rights movement, the burgeoning women’s lib movement, the evil Vietnam war and other seismic events of the turbulent, roller-coaster 1960s that altered America forever. The heroic movers and shakers of the Creative Revolution…bear no resemblance to the cast of characters on Mad Men. The more I think and write about Mad Men, the more I take the show as a personal insult. So f*ck you, Mad Men, you phony gray-flannel-suit, male-chauvinist, no-talent, WASP, white-shirted, racist, anti-Semitic Republican SOBs!

Lois relished delivering this rant (one would assume that he has had the opportunity to deliver it on many occasions) and it elicited much glee from the audience. He ended it with a photo composition of his younger self and Don Draper, proclaiming, "Besides, I was much better looking."

Nancy Straughan textiles + The Power of Making

Nancy Straughan and her fashion and textiles
Textile designer Nancy Straughan recently introduced herself and her work via our suggestions link. (Thank you to everyone who is submitting their links and portfolios! Even if you don't hear from me right away, I look at all of it and put you in my visual file for later reference.) While perusing Nancy's blog, I came across her post of a video by the Victoria & Albert museum that I'd like to share with you as well.

Blogshop in NYC!

UPPERCASE is please to be a {small} part of Blogshop, a travelling photoshop + blogging workshop, when they make their next stop in New York City September 24 and 25. I've provided complimentary issues going into the goodie bags for all the participants, to help ignite their creative fires! Check out this gorgeous workspace that they'll be using. wow.

Here's a video from a recent workshop. Looks like too much fun!

B L O G S H O P 2 - Los Angeles from Son of Shark Pig on Vimeo.

Blogshop is run by Bri Emery of designlovefest + photographer Angela Kohler

"BLOGSHOP is is a Photoshop bootcamp. minus the push-ups. It is a full weekend spent stuffing your brain full of things to make your images on your blog unique and eye catching. We teach the basics from scratch as well as some more advanced techniques and then applying them with your own perspective to layouts that you will use when you go back to your own blog. People who have no experience with Photoshop will leave the course with confidence to create layout, prep images for mood boards and collages, retouch skin and color correct images, animate gifs, add textures, borders, type and drawing to their images to make each of their blog posts or other visual materials special. At the end of the first day we will have a portrait session, so on the second day you can work on your own pictures which will be perfect for contributor photos and bio pages. This jump-right-in approach to Photoshop is a great way to demystify the program, and make it another tool to bring with you into the competitive world of visual design."