GRISAILLE, a blog


Archive for February, 2009

Insights 2009

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

How dare you assume I want to parlez-vous with you?

Every year, the Walker Art Museum hosts Insights 2009, a lecture series on graphic design.

This year’s series starts March 10, and appears to be well worth attending. The theme this year is typography.

On March 10, the series kicks of with local type designer Process. Besides doing custom type for publications such as the New York Times Magazine, their fonts have been used for brand-identity purposes by the likes of NBC and Nokia phones.

On March 17 we’ll hear from David Reinfurt, a New York-based designer whose low-fi, avant-garde designs inform his work for O-R-G and Dexter Sinister. Like him or hate him, he’ll get you thinking about the purpose and meaning of design.

On March 24 it’s Experimental Jetset, a Dutch firm that has practically fetishized the use of Helvetica. They did the word balloons at the top of this post, but a better example of their simple-but-eye-grabbing work is shown below. You can read about the design here.

Poster designed by Experimental Jetset for Akademische Mitteilungen, a German magazine.

Poster designed by Experimental Jetset for Akademische Mitteilungen, a German magazine.

Finally, on March 31, comes Ellen Lupton, a Baltimore-based designer who, as director of the Graphic Design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art, curates exhibitions intended to introduce design to a broader audience. She teaches a course on “design writing”, intended to develop the skill with words that so often gets overlooked by our visually-oriented industry.

A series ticket costs $70 ($48 for Walker/AIGA members), or you can buy a ticket to an individual lecture for $20 ($15). If you’re a student you can buy individual tickets for $10, which ends up being cheaper than buying even a discounted series ticket. Click on one of the Walker links above for details.

I’m planning on attending at least two of the lectures, depending on my schedule. So if you’re going, drop me a line: we can meet up and say “hi” either before or after.

New freelance job web site

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Here’s another place to look for freelance work: GraphicDesignFreelanceJobs.com.

Founded and run by several graphic designers, it similar to competing sites such as Lime Exchange or FreelanceDesigners.com — but unlike Lime Exchange in particular, you won’t spend so much time competing with cut-rate firms in India.

Further, it aggregates job listings from multiple sources rather than a small pool of registered users, and you don’t have to create an account to use it.

2009 One Show awards

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

It’s early 2009, and that means awards season, where designers submit their best work of 2008 in hopes of recognition and maybe some cash.

The One Show, now in its ninth year, is a well-regarded advertising and marketing award with a separate category for design. The deadline for entry is Feb. 27.

The entry fee is steep — $300 for a single entry, $500 for a campaign of 3-5 ads — but the payoff in recognition if you win makes it a worthwhile effort if you’ve got something truly kick-ass.

How clients see designers

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Entrepreneur.com has an interesting series called “What I’ve learned”, where business owners talk about some of the lessons they’ve received from reality.

The latest one describes one woman’s experience with web designers.

The bullet points:

1. Learn as Much as You Can On Your Own.

2. Don’t Work With Friends.

3. Find someone Who Has Been Around and Isn’t Going Anywhere.

4. Make Sure Any ‘Extras’ Purchased Are Under Your Name.

5. Ask Your Designer To Note All Changes, Folders, etc.

6. Pay by Project, Not Hourly.

7. Be Clear On Your Expectations.

8. Keep it Business Focused.

9. Watch Your Spending.

A lot of that is obvious. But it’s worth keeping in mind that the client’s understanding of what you do is a lot different than your own. Not only do they think complicated things are easy and easy things complicated; they’re a lot more emotionally and financially invested in the project than you.

Given that, the only way to avoid disappointment is clear, constant communication. Tell them what you’re doing and why, what it will cost and how long it will take. Make sure you’re both clear on what is expected. Describe the alternatives so they know the consequences of their choices.

Welcome!

Friday, February 13th, 2009

I’ve set up this blog both as a collecting point for my thoughts, and to demonstrate how you can seamlessly integrate a blog into your website. In this case I’m using Wordpress blogging software, running under my own domain, with the PHP, HTML and CSS tweaked to match the rest of my site. Cost? About six hours of installation, HTML recoding and content setup.

Anyway, welcome to the site and I hope you find items that interest you!