So i bought myself a new camera, the Canon 60D and i’m just loving the 50mm prime lens. Great stuff at low light. lazy Sunday afternoon pics below.
Category: Blog
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Life within the design industry in China, A Questionnaire.
I am using some Shanghai design studios to showcase Chinese talent. One of the studios I am featuring is Thread and I was hoping that I might be able to send one of your team members a small questionnaire to complete. It is only five questions in length and it would go a long way in aiding my understanding of life within the design industry in China.
Question 1
In this new decade, how would you characterise China’s rank in the world of international graphic design? Is it catching up, falling back or setting the bar?
ME: Simply catching up. Everyone is being inspired by each other, but few are creating anything new.
There is also very little understanding of the foundation of traditional graphic design, typography etc, and like in all mediums, without the basics it’s difficult to push boundaries.Question 2
More and more Western designers are now moving to the East. What would you say is so appealing about Shanghai’s design and advertising world for industry professionals? Is there a sense that China is the next ‘place to be’ for designers?
ME: For many it’s just a great place to be. Fun exciting, always new and a huge amount of opportunity to do something new, be someone, get your work out there. No one is here because it’s the place to be for graphics!
In the short term a little western talent goes a long way, the local designers are eager to learn, but in the long term, once we’ve served out purpose, we won’t be needed anymore. This is the same with product design and engineering in 1970’s Japan and 1980’s Taiwan.Question 3
On the Thread website, it refers to the design world in Shanghai as a ‘commercial battlefield’. What qualitiesdoes a successful design/ad need to have to make it stand out amidst thousands of other designs in the city, each fighting for the consumer’s attention?
ME: Chinese people are exposed to more new brands each day than any other nation, you can’t stand out so there’s no point trying. It’s a case of targeting the right people in the right places.
Question 4
China has a love of technology and it’s online community is the biggest in the world – this has led to some new and innovative forms of advertising. In terms of the wider picture, would you agree that in the years to come the central focus of Chinese graphic design will be behind the screen rather than on the printed page?
ME: Not really. If digital technology stayed the way it was 2 or 3 years ago then yes. Traditional graphics won’t be as important in the coming digital era. Information flow and user interface design will be. Accessing and sharing information will be the goal, not big graphic heavy flash websites, (nike adidas etc.)
I’d like to think that China’s heritage or printed material will stay with them, though we’d all probably run out of paper.
However, I do think we’re going to see a big shift in attitude towards Chinese film and associated graphics with that.
Question 5
In the future, do you see Chinese cities like Shanghai as having a major influence on design and advertising the world over, as well as being frontiers for the latest trends and technologies? Will it be the city all designers will look to? If so, how many years will we have to wait before it becomes a reality?
ME: Yes. Again, I think it’s interesting to look at Japan and Taiwan. 40 years ago (or so my uncle tells me) everything had a Made in Japan sticker on it. They were mocked in the west as being the factory of the world, making cheap shitty electronics and toys. No morals on copyright and certainly no ideas of their own.
By the 1990’s Tokyo was the coolest city on the planet. Sadly it’s not moved any further forward since then.
We have young designers in our office with so much raw talent. Everyone tells me “my grandfather was an artist”. But they’re slow to get up to speed and find it hard to talk about ideas (in English or Chinese). This generation won’t be creative directors until their late 30’s or more.
My view is that it is the failings in the school system, where by being creative and asking questions of your teacher is frowned upon. Failings in social education, where by 18 year olds are staying home with their parents to study all evening instead of drinking budget cider and smoking weed. If you don’t know yourself, your mind, and have an understanding of people, it’s impossible to create something that talks to people, and more importantly, to sell that idea to your (also) closed minded client.
Thank you for taking the time to complete this questionnaire.
ME: No problem. -
Light of the cheese grater
Designed in google sketch up!
Paint wires and graters from Ikea
Drilled by my local metal worker
1 garden table ruined
Wires into holes Wires into holes Wires into holes Wires into holes
The least fun part.
TaDaaa
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Cornwall panoramic
Not too many photos this year. but put this one together. look for mystery boobs in the cliff face.
Click for the BIG version
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Censo****
Flickr still censored in China. Utube not available. No wikipedia, bbc or tits, why have internet at all?
For those of you suffering like me… buy this VPN (thank you witopia) -
London today
my thoughts are with you guys in London today
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“That’s why they always put two blank pages at the back of the atlas.”
In the leading machine the Head of the Air Force was sitting beside the pilot. He had a world atlas on his knees and he kept staring first at the atlas, then at the ground below, trying to figure out where they were going. Frantically he turned the pages of the Atlas. “Where the devil are we going?” he cried.
“I haven’t the foggiest idea,” the pilot answered.
“The Queen’s orders were to follow the giant and that’s exactly what I’m doing.”
The pilot was a young Air Force officer with a bushy moustache. He was very proud of his moustache. He was also quite fearless and he loved adventure. He thought this was a super adventure. “It’s fun going to new places,” he said.
“New places!” shouted the Head of the Air Force. “What the blazes d’you mean new places?”
“This place we’re flying over now isn’t in the atlas, is it?” the pilot said, grinning.
“You’re darn right it isn’t in the atlas!” cried the Head of the Air Force. “We’ve flown clear past the last page!”
“I expect that old giant knows where he’s going ,” the young pilot said.
“He’s leading us to disaster!” cried the Head of the Air Force. He was shaking with fear. In the seat behind him sat the Head of the Army who was even more terrified.
“You don’t mean to tell me we’ve gone right out of the atlas?” he cried, leaning forward to look.
“That’s exactly what I am telling you!” cried the Air Force man. “Look for yourself. Here’s the very last map in the whole flaming atlas! We went off that over an hour ago!” He turned that page. As in all atlases, there were two completely blank pages at the very end. “So now we must be somewhere here,” he said, putting a finger on one of the blank pages.
“Where’s here?” cried the Head of the Army.
The young pilot was still grinning broadly. He said to them, “That’s why they always put two blank pages at the back of the atlas. They’re for new countries. You’re meant to fill them in yourself.”Roald Dahl, The BFG
Thank you for reminding me Jules x.
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Byways Bermuda , Bermuda. 2006
Contacted to make a simple clean flash for the AdVantage advertising agency in bermuda.This time not for them but for one of thier clients. a local tour opperator.
nice site aimed at a mature audience.functionailty includes:
full secure credit card orderingbespoke php back end lets you change all the content and images on the site.