— Swiss Legacy

Archive
January, 2009 Monthly archive

The Design Auction 09 is being held in collaboration with the St Bride Library in London – the event will be held at the Library and we will be donating half the proceeds to the Library.

The current design studios involved are: Pentagram (Paula Scher), AVA, True North, Magma, YCN, Studio 8, Spin, SEA and Johnson Banks.

The St Bride Foundation relies upon donations to carry out its work and keep its doors open. They provide lectures, performances, lessons and activities for all ages and interests and keep the St Bride Printing Library open free of charge.

Available very soon.

The Changing Face of Letterpress
Well Gallery, London College of Communication
Elephant & Castle
London
SE1 6SB

05-11 March 2009

The Changing Face of Letterpress is an exhibition of staff and student work from the London College of Communication, seeking to challenge the boundaries of Letterpress within the current design climate whilst drawing from the rich printing history of the college. The exhibition explores the changing role of Letterpress within design education, from a typographical teaching tool to a medium that is igniting process-driven work from students within the School of Graphic Design.

Comparisons can be drawn between ephemera from the London College of Printing Archive and current work documenting the typefaces held within the workshop. Students from across all disciplines have referenced traditional type specimen sheets within projects that encompass outcomes as varied as illustration, interactive design and moving image.

A lively programme of talks including guest speakers Phil Baines and Catherine Dixon will accompany the exhibition. Visitors will also have the chance to participate in one of the workshops, which will be running throughout the duration of the show. Please check back soon for further details, or email Rose Gridneff to join our mailing list.

It’s a sad day for me to discover that tDR isn’t anymore… I am one of those thousand designers that probably started designing because of them. RIP!

After 23 years of brain-aided communication, the much-admired, much copied studio, The Designers Republic closed for business on Tuesday. But, as its founder Ian Anderson tells CR, it will rise again

All week, rumours have been flying around the internet that DR had gone out of business. CR can confirm that it is true. On Tuesday this week, the business was closed with nine staff being made redundant. According to its founder, Ian Anderson, the studio became insolvent due to a combination of factors: “We’d lost a couple of clients, didn’t win a couple of pitches, got a tax bill which should have been sorted out and wasn’t and a major client who didn’t pay the money they owed us – in themselves any of those things would have been fine but when they come all at once there’s not much you can do.â€?

Read more on CR blog.
(via CR)

Studio Ten and a Half was founded in 2007 by Charlotte Bolton and Jessie Earle. Charlotte and Jessie met while working at the renowned design agency Pentagram in London. They went on to work at leading agencies Emery Frost, Melbourne and Marque Creative, Glasgow, before moving back to London and setting up their own company. They have worked with a wide variety of clients that include Mothercare, The Dorchester, Phaidon Press, Tate Modern, Liberty and Laurence King Publishing. Their work has been widely published and they have won numerous awards including a prestigious D&AD silver award.