— Swiss Legacy

Archive
April, 2007 Monthly archive

Designing Grid Systems For Flash

I found this very interesting post made by Antonio Carusone of AisleOne blog.

A very good introduction on how using grid system for flash and also for general webdesign content. Grids are not only for Swiss graphic design on printed matter…

I’ve decided that I’m going to write a little something up for those people interested in grids. I’m going to walk you through the process of creating a grid for a Flash based site that will work for screen resolutions of 1024×768 and up. The beauty of creating a grid for Flash is that you can create a fixed grid and don’t have to be concerned with the user changing type sizes and screwing up the entire grid of the site. The only time you have to be concerned with a fixed grid is if you build a Flash site where the contents of the site repositions based on the size of the browser window, in which case you would have to figure out a fluid grid which is something I haven’t done yet but plan to do in the future.

Read here

http://www.tdc.org/news/2007Results/index.html" onclick="return TrackClick(

Type designed by Christina Bee

Results here

Jan Tschichold, Posters of the Avantgarde

Jan Tschichold (1902–1974 ) was one of the most outstanding and influential graphic artists and typographers of the 20th century. Throughout his life he stood in the service of print and writing, first as a talented young calligrapher and designer of some 70 posters and then, later on, as a self-critical typographer and typeface designer. In his posters, he expresses the avant-garde ideas of the Neue Typografie, or New Typography, which were strongly influenced by the Bauhaus. Tschichold received many prizes for his work. For example, the Société Typographique de France appointed him an honorary member in 1960, and he was named an honorary Royal Designer of Industry by the Royal Society of Arts in 1965.

This book is an analytical examination of Tschichold’s posters. It contains his own collection of posters, with works by Hans Arp, El Lissitzky, László Moholy-Nagy, Oskar Schlemmer, and others, as well as the approximately 70 posters he designed himself.
(Source : Birkhäuser)

The Book :
Jan Tschichold, Posters of the Avantgarde
Le Coultre, Martijn F., Purvis, Alston W.
Original Dutch edition published by VK Projects, LAREN, 2006
2007, 237 p., 261 illus., 221 in colour, Softcover
ISBN: 978-3-7643-7604-8
A Birkhäuser book

Links :
Jan Tschichold on Wikipedia
Short biography on www.textism.com
www.tschichold.de

RMN logo redesigned by Experimental Jetset
(RMN logo redesigned by EJ)

Swiss Legacy: Could you please introduce yourself? Where are you from? What are your backgrounds?
Experimental Jetset: We’re Experimental Jetset, a small graphic design studio based in Amsterdam, consisting of three persons: Marieke Stolk, Danny van den Dungen and Erwin Brinkers. We focus mostly on printed matter and installation work.Danny and Erwin were both born in Rotterdam; Marieke was born in Amsterdam. We started working together while studying at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy (Amsterdam). Marieke and Danny graduated in 1997; Erwin, who was in a different class, graduated in 1998. Since 2000,
we teach at the Rietveld Academy.

SL: How do you work on a project? Alone, collective?
EJ: Always collective, never alone.

SL: Why did you choose the Helvetica typeface as your primary tool?
EJ: We started using Helvetica around 1995/1996, while we were still studying at the Rietveld Academy. The first time we used it on a large scale was in 1997, when we were asked to redesign the Dutch lifestyle magazine ‘Blvd’, also known as ‘Boulevard’. (We were still students at the Rietveld around that time; we managed to do the whole redesign as our graduation project).
Blvd used to have this really layered, baroque style. We stripped it down completely, using only Helvetica, and trying to separate text and image as strictly as possible.
The critics hated it. We were still students, not even graduated, and already the large newspapers completely attacked the redesign, saying that Blvd now looked like a medicine packaging. (A few years later, all these newspapers had glossy weekly style supplements that looked exactly like our redesign of Blvd).

At first, the reason why we used Helvetica for the redesign of Blvd was purely practical. Because Helvetica consists of such a large family (different weights, and different styles: extended, compressed, etc.), it enabled us to use all these different sorts of
Helvetica for all the different sections of the magazine, while the magazine still looked consistent. (Remember, this was in 1997.
Nowadays, we usually only use two weights for each project).

The moment we first used Helvetica, it felt like coming home. In the early Nineties, a lot of students, including us, were really
interested in the more ‘deconstructed’ look of magazines like Raygun and Emigre, and designers such as David Carson, Frank Kozik, etc. As much as we found that whole movement interesting, we still also felt slightly disconnected from it; it was a way of designing that was heavily linked with the Californian surf scene, skate magazines, grunge, etc. All things that hugely fascinated us, but still, it felt too much like a ‘borrowed’ heritage to us.
When, in the mid-Nineties, we first started to use Helvetica, we suddenly felt connected to our own roots, the environment we grew up in: Dutch society in the Seventies, our own education, the institutions of our youth, social democracy in general. It was as if we were suddenly reunited with our own heritage. Fact is, we didn’t grow up near the beach, or near Las Vegas neon signs; we grew up in cities such as Rotterdam and Amsterdam, cultural environments designed by people such as Wim Crouwel, heavily relying on Dutch social democratic thinking. To us, using Helvetica was a way to be true to that heritage, but also to come to terms with it, and to investigate it actively.

Now, after using Helvetica intensively for over ten years, we still find it an intriguing typeface. What we find interesting about
Helvetica is its paradoxical nature: on the one hand, it is a neutral typeface, or better said, it is perceived as such. On the other hand, it carries this very heavy ideological baggage. There is this really interesting tension between its functionality, and the meaning that it gained over the years. It is a typeface that is empty and loaded at the same time.

Download the entire interview here (pdf)

This is the second part of Wim Crouwel’s interview made by french graphic design magazine “Etapes”.

via Etapes Blog