Archive for the 'Illustration' Category

Video Games vs Real Life

By UK based designer and illustrator, Aled Lewis. See more on his flickr page here.

IBM: Smarter Planet

Simple, clean and intelligent campaign for IBM. Illustrations by Noma Bar, who had been posted on this site a while back.

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy, Paris, France
Creative Director: Susan Westre
Associate Creative Director / Art Director: Ginevra Capece
Associate Creative Director / Copywriter: Fergus O’Hare
Client Account Director: Suzanne Assaf
Agency Account Directors: Kim Ball, Ben Messiaen
Graphic Designer / Illustrator: Noma Bar
Illustrator: Tanya Holbrook
Typographer: Sid Tomkins

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Untooned Characters

Your favourite animated characters in the terrifying flesh. Most of these were created a while ago, but it’s interesting to see them all together.

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GQ Italia 10th Anniversary

“To commemorate the 10 year anniversary for the men’s style magazine, GQ Italia, editor Michele Lupi selected ten prominent graphic designers to contribute a cover design. Each designer was given the theme “10 years of men, stories, adventures and style” along with a fixed position for the masthead. The list of designers included Leonardo Sonnoli, Matteo Bologna, Louise Fili, Marian Bantjes, Neville Brody, Alex Trochut, Milton Glaser, Chip Kidd, Ken Barber / House Industries, and Experimental Jetset. A deluxe limited-edition box set including all covers will be auctioned.”
See more cover designs after the jump.  source

Noma Bar: Negative Space

I’ve profiled this illustrator before, but these recent works are too good to not post. Noma Bar uses negative space to create a single shape from multiple themed elements. He has a book titled Negative Space, and his available for purchase here. See more of his work after the jump.  (via Creative Review)

Interview with House Industries

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“Known throughout the world as a prolific type foundry, House Industries has made a considerable impact on the world of design. House Industries fonts scream from billboards, wish happy whatever from tens of thousands of greeting cards, serve as the basis for consumer product logos and add elements of style to a wide range of mainstream media. In their illustrious career, House artists have mastered a large cross-section of design disciplines. Their typography deftly melds cultural, musical and graphic elements. From early forays into distressed digital alphabets to sophisticated type and lettering systems, House Industries’ work transcends graphic conventions and reaches out to a broad audience. What ultimately shines in the House Industries oeuvre is what always conquers mediocrity: a genuine love for their subject matter.”

Read the interview here, and visit their website.



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