Latest Melvilles posters


Well, it’s been a while since we’ve put up a post. The holidays have come and gone, we’ve moved our office (more on that soon), and we’re still waiting for February to act like February. We have a backlog of news, fun finds and projects to announce, so let’s begin here:

It was a fine summer and fall of music-making for The Melvilles (Karl’s side gig) – full-on electric shows at the Fine Line and Lake Harriet Bandshell and acoustic sets at the new and highly successful Fulton Farmers Market – and we helped promote their events with colorful, feel-good posters. Our goal is to create a distinctive look and feel for The Melvilles, and give a nod to the event location, setting or season. Without an outside client, this has been a great opportunity for us to explore different ways of creating eye-catching and impactful design. Exploration makes us better designers.

We’ve gotten lots of questions about the typeface used in these posters. It’s called Goshen, and was created by Bill Moran of Blinc Publishing in St. Paul. It’s one of a series he worked on using old wood block type. You can find it and more at Chank.com.

You can click here to learn more about The Melvilles, and email us directly if you would like to be on The Melvilles’ email announcement list.




Discovery: FieldCandy Tents


We see lots of fun ideas cross our screens in any given week, but every once in a while something rises above. So maybe it’s the cold Minnesota weather and the prospect of a good five months of winter, or the fact that Susan and I pack up the car with gear every year to do an annual camping trip, but this product idea leapt out at us.

FieldCandy is a British company that uses high-resolution large-format printing technology to take camping tents to a whole new level. They’ve employed the help of several designers and photographers to create limited edition graphic treatments of each tent fly. See some of our favorite examples from their collection below.

The FieldCandy mission is to “inject colour, creativity and fun into the camping space by offering a range of totally unexpected designs. We want to delight you with our products. The average tent we believe isn’t fun, they all look the same, we don’t think that’s right. A tent should say something about who’s inside it, our tents are fun, exciting, iconic, individual and simply unmissable.” Don’t we all deserve that? See the whole catalog here.


Metro Dogs Website Launched


Metro Dogs Daycare & Boarding has opened for business in the Minneapolis North Loop neighborhood. This is the culmination of many, many months of hard work by owner Amy Rosenthal – turning a life-long love of dogs into her dream business.

We designed the identity for Metro Dogs early on, and have been working hand-in-hand with Amy on ads, signage and this website in preparation for the Grand Opening. After a ribbon cutting on Friday, there’s a big Open House in celebration this Saturday from noon until 3. Stop by – and bring your dog.

But check out her site first. We designed it to be a reflection of Amy and how she runs her business – straightforward, no-nonsense, dog-centric, and full of puppy-love passion. We worked with Clay Johnston at Sprung Interactive for the WordPress development.

Here’s the site.

WoMN: Women in Minnesota Design show

WoMN: Women in Minnesota DesignA special thank you to everyone who came to the WoMN: Women in Minnesota Design exhibit at the CVA Gallery. Having the honor of being one of the participants, it has been absolutely thrilling for me. And a great success for CVA and the Minnesota design community!

The wonderful thing about this show is that it was not a graphic design competition. It’s a sampling of the diversity and influence of women’s design work in Minnesota over the last 30 years and continuing today. Celebrating a wide range of powerful work – advertisements, branding campaigns, graphics, posters, publications, furniture, products and industrial designs – it recognizes the contributions that women have made to the profession.

Minnesota is blessed with a large, incredibly supportive and smart design community. The 23 designers, chosen by committee to represent a cross-section, had to be professionally prominent, longtime Minnesotans who had demonstrated “leadership, innovation and influence” in the wide-open field of design. The show received a large amount of press coverage, including this nice article in the Star Tribune on November 3.

The show runs through this Sunday, November 13 at the College of Visual Arts Gallery – so there is still time to catch it before it’s gone (details below).

– Susan


Susan’s corner of the gallery


Susan and the other honorees celebrate at the opening


CVA Gallery:
173 Western Avenue North in Saint Paul
NW corner of Western and Selby avenues
651.757.4080

Hours:
Today, Thursday 12 – 8 pm
Friday 12 – 6 pm
Saturday and Sunday 12 – 4 pm

Photos courtesy of the College of Visual Arts and Bill Kelley Photography.

Susan Hopp selected to be part of WOMN: Women in Minnesota Design event


We’re thrilled and flattered to announce that Susan has been invited to take part in this fall’s College of Visual Arts 2011 Leaders in Design series, WOMN: Women in Minnesota Design. The event will celebrate women who’ve helped put Minnesota on the map “with graphic design that’s conceptual, meaningful, inspiring, hard working, and pretty powerful”.

Susan is honored to be among the 23 industry-leading women selected to exhibit their design work at the CVA Gallery from October 27 through November 13, 2011. Criteria for selection included leadership, innovation, influence, accolades for design excellence, and longevity in Minnesota. Details on the event can be found here.

Ready Steady Bang


For the iPhone: 30 ways to kill a cowboy – this is just too cute:

ready steady bang – 30 ways from Ed Barrett on Vimeo.

Fresh Thinking


Discovery Monday 08.08


Mapnificent.comI love some of the new web applications based on Google Earth. We featured the Globe Genie project last year, and now there’s one called Mapnificent. It shows areas you can reach with public transportation in a given time in select cities around the world. The above example shows how far we could get from our office in 15 minutes – downtown, the UM campus, or very close to our house.

There’s also a very helpful short video about how Mapnificent can be utilized.


Offbook“Words have meaning, and type has spirit. And the combination is spectacular.” So says designer Paula Scher in the latest edition of OffBook from PBS Arts. We are surrounded by type and typography, but most of us see it on a very unconscious level. This short video can help all of us be more aware of the properties of type in our environment, and the effort by typographers and designers to match messages with appropriate letter forms. See the video here.

Taking care of the hip, urban dog


Here’s a project right in our sweet spot. Brand identity. And a fun one to boot.

Entrepreneur Amy Rosenthal, came to us for a brand identity for Metro Dogs, a new dog daycare and boarding business opening this Fall in downtown Minneapolis’ North Loop. The StarTribune recently reported 100’s of new apartments are headed for this sprouting riverfront neighborhood – and along with high-density comes dogs.

Check out the cool stuff we created for her – a logo, color palette (mailman blue, grass, fire hydrant red, etc.), and fun “report card” symbols (good, sleepy, sad, etc.). We are now working on a website, signage and promotions which will be ready for the business’ opening.

In the meantime, they have a Facebook page up and running with updates and more information. Please go like them… and spread the word.

By the way, in June we authored a guest blog post on Winthrop & Weinstine’s Duets Blog on the topic of brand names using the word “Dog.” Seems the positive associations people have with dogs are good for brands – even for those that have nothing to do with dogs.


Metro Dogs Logo


Metro Dogs color palette


Metro Dogs "report card" images


45 Degrees does T-shirts!


We might be better known for identity, print and websites, but we love it when quick special projects pop up.

In June, the Episcopal Church in Minnesota hosted the triennial Episcopal Youth Event (EYE) that brought together 1500 youth for workshops, fun and worship. The focal project was construction of a Zero-Energy House being donated to East Central Habitat for Humanity for a deserving family.

We were asked to design a special T-shirt with one design to work on three shirt colors (supervisors, adults and youth) for the Minnesota contingent of about 250. And they were needed within the week! We jumped right on it and had some fun!

Here are a few concepts and the final design, masterfully printed by Wentworth Screen Printing.


Concepts for the t-shirts


The EYE t-shirt


The Minnesota contingent at the Housebuild.The t-shirts in action!