Merry Christmas & Happy New Year

Well, another year has almost come to a close. This may not be quite as eloquent as the Queen's Christmas message, but I'd simply like to thank my clients who have supported me during 2011. Thank you for allowing me to be creative, because that's what I love. In lieu of posting Christmas cards this year, I decided to donate to Oxfam instead. I apologise for not posting a card to each of you, but I thought a donation to those in need was more meaningful.

This year was very busy, and at long last my third picture book, The Box Boy was released by Windy Hollow Books. My editor, Helen Chamberlin and the Windy Hollow team were a pleasure to work with. I am very grateful for their support.

I hope that you all have a safe and restful festive season. I look forward to working with you all again in 2012.

From Mal (and The Box Boy).

 

Congratulations!

In addition to working as a designer, I also teach VCE Visual Communication & Design. Today my students received their results after a long year of hard work, stress, a few tears and eye-strain due to long hours working in front of computer screens and generating folios packed full of fantastic ideas. Being a VCE student is hard work, I've been there and done it myself and there's no way that I'd want to do it ever again. So, I'd like to take this opportunity (with a little tear in my eye) to say, "Totes Congrats!"You've all done your best and for that I think you should all be proud of yourselves. I sincerely wish each of you all the best for the future. Enjoy your summer break, be safe, keep in touch, and most of all, enjoy life. That adventure has only just begun!

The Story of a College Drop-Out

An excerpt from Simon Garfield’s ‘Just My Type’ p.11-12 Introduction

On 12th June 2005, a fifty-year-old man stood up in front of a crowd of students at Stanford University and spoke of his campus days at a lesser institution, Reed College in Portland, Oregon. ‘Throughout the campus,’ he remembered, ‘every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. Because I had dropped out and didn’t have to take the normal classes, I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and sans serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.’

At the time, the student drop-out believed that nothing he had learned would find a practical application in his life. But things changed. Ten years after college, that man, by the name of Steve Jobs, designed his first Macintosh computer, a machine that came with something unprecedented – a wide choice of fonts. As well as including familiar types such as Times New Roman and Helvetica, Jobs introduced several new designs, and had evidently taken some care in their appearance and names. They were called after cities he loved such as Chicago and Toronto. He wanted each of them to be as distinct and beautiful as the calligraphy he had encountered a decade before, and at least two of the fonts, Venice and Los Angeles, had a handwritten look to them.

It was the beginning of something – a seismic shift in our everyday relationship with letters and with type. An innovation that, within a decade or so, would place the word ‘font’ – previously a piece of technical language limited to the design and printing trade – in the vocabulary of every computer user.”

Steve Jobs was and still is a truly inspiring man. Its difficult to believe that he was a college drop-out… Or, perhaps it is quite believable. He was obviously different to his fellow students, a dreamer, a believer, creative thinker and future leader. It’s difficult to measure the legacy he has left behind. Jobs has changed the way we use technology, changed the way we interact with each other. He humanised technology and paved the way for future technological advances.

To finish, here’s a quote from Apple.com, displayed this morning as a splash page to commemorate his life:

Steve Jobs 1955 – 2011

“Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an amazing human being. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves behind the company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.”

 

Digital vs Traditional

I've owned a Wacom tablet for about ten years, but have always felt awkward using it, and to tell the truth I'm a bit old-fashioned and prefer to use traditional mediums like watercolour and pencil. However, the other night I made a little sketch in my journal and scanned the drawing. The image above has been coloured using my old Wacom tablet. When I scanned the drawing, I retained the paper texture from my journal, so the flat areas of colour applied to the illustration in Photoshop look more organic. Without giving too much away, the old guy above is the beginning of a new personal illustration project.

Desktop Magazine: April 2011

Freshly rebranded design mag Desktop has just hit the shelves for the month of April. Desktop has been a companion of mine for many years and it was pleasing to see an article of my own in the new issue. A few months back, Desktop tweeted for designers who collect things to create submissions for a new segment in the mag. Being a habitual packaging collector/hoarder, I decided to create a little article with a few images of packages from my collection. While studying my Masters degree in design I also wrote a story about a boy who collects boxes and makes amazing things with them. So I formed a nice link between my content for the article and the release of my upcoming book The Box Boy. The new issue of Desktop is well worth checking out. The typography treatment and stock selection is gorgeous. It now feels like a high-end boutique publication with some really interesting content.