Friday, March 28, 2014

Funny Business promotion book / mid-eighties

The company was an artist agency based in London and this lovely little book, from the mid-eighties, showcased some of the top illustrators available back then.  Eight and three-quarter inches square with sixty-one pages (and the only book I've ever seen with even page numbers on the right) it's the perfect medium to show off all this talent. 
     In the digital age, this kind of printed promotion is, unfortunately, history. 




































Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Ted Naos / Color game / 1999

Designer, architect and teacher Ted Naos created this interesting set of die-cuts.  There are twelve colored, two white and two black ones in the set plus four other cards printed with information about color theory and the practical aspects of color and light.  
     The die-cuts, oddly, are not square but 3.75 by 3.5 inches and come in a plastic container similar to a CD jewel case, this can opened and used to display the color patterns you create.  The idea is simple enough to create so you could create your own larger size version using thick colored paper and maybe cut out diagonal or oblong shapes.  Thickish colored plastic could create some intriguing options because of its transparency.  
     This is just the kind of fun item found in art and design museum gift shops.








Friday, March 14, 2014

Help! magazine covers / 1960-1965


Mad magazine started to take off after issue twenty-four in July 1956 when editor Harvey Kurtzman switched from a ten-cent comic to a twenty-five-cent magazine (though still heavily reliant on a comic strip format) but things didn't go Kurtzman's way and he left Mad that year. 
     He always seemed to be chasing after the ultimate humor magazine.  It was almost in his grasp with the brilliant Trump in 1957 but only two issues were published (by Hugh Hefner) before cash-flow problems forced its closure.  Next up was Humbug, starting in August 1957 but that only last for eleven issues.  
     Help! arrived in August 1960 and for Kurtzman it was a record run of twenty-six issues until the last one in September 1965.  It turns out this was his longest running magazine.  Because the editorial budget was so low a lot of the pages were filled with whole page news or celebrity photos with speech balloons added.  Reprinting historical comic strips and readers cartoons filled more pages.  An interesting idea in many issues was the fumeti, an Italian style photo-strip that used several actors and personalities who became famous in later years.  As the cover is vitally important (especially for newsstand publications) I always thought Kurtzman created some really clever visual ideas as you can see below.