
Actual portfolio, cardboard and fake leather, 34 by 42 inches, circa 1978.
In the fall of 1979, prior to my last year of design school, on a trip to New York City, I went job hunting. I visited about six design firms. One of them, Vignelli Associates, eventually made me a job offer, and that's where I started my career one week after graduating from the University of Cincinnati's College of Design, Architecture and Art in June 1980. I didn't know it then, but that would be the last time I would look for a job.
On each of those visits, I carried my work in a black portfolio, 34 by 42 inches, acetate sleeves, pockets in the front and back. That portfolio sat in a box, largely untouched, with some other junk in the closets and basements of the three places I've lived in the last 27 years, sort of like a slowly decaying design time capsule. A few weeks ago, I opened it up for the first time in a long time.
I realize you're not hiring, but may I show you my portfolio?

We'll start with this portrait of jazz saxophonist Sam Rivers, copied from photographs on his album The Complete Blue Note Sessions. This is the kind of thing upon which I had built my reputation by the time I graduated from high school: painstaking realism in the style of Bernie Fuchs, Bob Heindel and especially Mark English. There wasn't any instruction in this kind of thing available at UC. I did it after hours, as a private exercise in self indulgence. One never heard names like Fuchs, Heindel and English invoked in our classes.
Instead, we heard a lot of names like Hoffman, Muller-Brockmann, and Weingart. And, of course, Paul Rand. I didn't realize it as a 17-year-old from suburban Cleveland, but in applying to study graphic design at the University of Cincinnati in 1975, I was enlisting in a particular midwestern strain of a nascent global design ideology. Most of my instructors had studied at Yale University under Rand, Bradbury Thompson and Alvin Eisenman, or at the Allgemeine Kunstgewerbeschule in Basel, Switzerland with Hoffman and Weingart.

So out went the crosshatching, and in came the grid systems. I became a designer with a split personality. Without ever putting aside my passion for lush, literal illustration and blunt commercial art, I became an enthusiastic student of the "new Swiss" movement that was sweeping across American design education in the wake of Weingart's 1972-73 U.S. lecture tour. Two leading Basel-trained practitioners, Ken Hiebert and Hans-U. Allemann, visited us from the Philadelphia College of Art and led a week-long workshop, resulting in this interpretation of a Rand quote from "Design and the Play Instinct." Like so many such interpretations, it is neither playful, nor fun, nor surprising, but rather a fairly succinct compendium of then-trendy European design gestures: dots, lines, diagonals, and simulated light-to-dark gradations.

That's not to say that we didn't learn practical things too, like how to render letterforms in a brand of black and white poster paint called Plaka that was specially imported from Switzerland and stocked in the UC bookstore expressly for us graphic design students.
We were asked to choose the name of an artist and interpret it typographically. (We didn't know we were fortunate to get a choice; year after year, Rand assigned all his students the same name, Leger.) I managed to combine what now seem like over-obvious visual puns with the expected typographic moves of the day, painstakingly executed by hand. For Ansel Adams, that meant an allusion to the photographer's trademark Zone System.

Or the enigmatic absences of Magritte's surrealism...

...or the collages of the Dada movement. With Schwitters, I got to indulge a seemingly insatiable infatuation I had for what Bill Drenttel calls Silk Road Typography, also beloved by kidnappers, sampled mildly in the Rand poster above, and with real gusto here. Hand painting letterforms is one of those ostensibly obsolete skills that I now concede was truly character building. Those hours improved my eye not just for typography but for symbol design and formmaking in general.

In an inversion of actual practice, formal exercises were often developed into preemptive responses to imaginary assignments for nonexistent clients. In this case, the Schwitters exercise became a poster for a notional exhibit at a gallery I invented that got its name either from the hero of Ayn Rand's epic novel Atlas Shrugged (which I read six times in my five years of college, sorry) or from the fact that I had only capital Gs left in my collection of presstype. This may account as well for the date range, oddly late in Schwitters's career for such a show. I am relieved that at least the artist was still alive in 1945; content was a pretty malleable thing for me in those days and I wouldn't have checked.

This was a classic assignment given by Cincinnati professor Joe Bottoni that I believe is still given to this day: pick an animal and render it in simplified forms. I have fond memories of sketching gorillas at the Cincinnati Zoo. Oddly enough, I don't remember seeing the work of local boy Charley Harper until much later. Thank God, because he had taken almost all the available animals for himself. Painted by hand, again, in black and white Plaka.

My selection of this subject turned into a problem when the second part of the assignment was revealed: to show the animal in motion. Gorillas are basically immobile. My way around this was a rare instance where I came up with a mildly funny solution to a class assignment. Note that the lettering on the tire is pretty much the same as the word "Kurt" in the Schwitters exercise. I really knew how to paint those kind of letters.

This was my response to a competition held by the Cincinnati Ballet to design a poster to promote their holiday show. This is clearly my attempt to steal from another one of my secret idols, Gilbert Lesser, the New York-based designer perhaps best known for the Studio 54 logo, and a non-doctrinaire master of geometric minimalism and Helvetica. Handcut Pantone paper and presstype. I lost the competition to someone — a non-designer, it looked like — who did a drawing of a ballerina and stuck some cursive typography next to it: an early reminder that high design didn't always play well with the regular folks.

On my own time, I dreamed of merging my interest in illustration, my love of commercial art, and my growing facility with classic form resolution. Freelance assignments gave the chance to try. I designed (and wrote) posters to promote the school magazine, Clifton, where my then-girlfriend (now wife) was business manager. The obvious model for this eclecticism was Pushpin, of course. But so tragically futile! How easy it seemed to imitate anyone who used flat colors, geometric shapes and sans serif type on a grid, and how hard it was to knock off Milton Glaser and Seymour Chwast. I began to realize around then that maybe I didn't have what it took to make it as a designing illustrator. (Note the Times Bold, one of my favorites back then. Take that, Coudal!)




I believe it was this piece that got me the job at Vignelli Associates. The assignment was to design a brochure for commercial label papers. Each page a square, a simple 2x2 grid, one size of Helvetica in two weights: quintessential International Style modernism straight out of the tube. More surprising to me, and dismaying as well, is how eerily the cropped label artwork anticipates the packaging I was to do for Saks Fifth Avenue nearly 30 years later. It's sobering to realize how trapped I am by my own handwriting.

This piece, one of several I did for Print's annual student cover design competition, was just about the last time I undertook an ambitious illustration, this one a self-portrait based on a old black-and-white picture my mom commissioned when I was five. I still like it, although it isn't very good. I lost the competition, of course, and retreated into the comfort of typography for, well, the rest of my life.
It's easy to assume that one grows in self-confidence over the course of a life in design, and in many ways I have. But looking back to 1979, I'm struck by how much nerve I had back then. Part of maturing as a designer is discovering what you're good at. Inevitably, you become biased towards what you know will work. In unknown territory lurks the risk of failure. Back then, I was too naive to know what risk was, and too enthusiastic to dream I'd be slowed by any obstacle. I'm older and wiser now, and, maybe, sounder and safer. Is it too late to take up crosshatching again?
Comments [119]
09.21.07
04:21
09.21.07
04:36
09.21.07
05:18
Considering the car explosions in Beirut though, maybe I should keep it somewhere safer so that if I get blown up on my way to work- some of my favored work will remain...
09.21.07
05:50
09.21.07
06:06
The Sam Rivers portrait is fantastic! It looks so NOW.
Nothing new under the sun, I guess.
09.21.07
06:21
We don't have any jobs at the moment, but we'll keep you on file and we'll let you know if anything arises.
We wish you all the best in your search for a job.
09.21.07
06:48
09.21.07
07:43
09.21.07
08:44
Derek, I must confess that British graphic design was basically unknown to me until my last year of school, when Pentagram published Living by Design and Colin Forbes came by to give a guest lecture.
In a pre-internet world, information was hard to come by, especialy between the coasts. The only means of dissemination of design work were competition annuals (all very American), a limited number of magazines (mostly fairly provincial), expensive books that might, just might, turn up in your local bookstore (no "graphic design" sections), and the occasional emissary like Forbes or Weingart.
I shudder to consider the perpetually overexcited state I'd be in had the internet and the blogosphere existed when I was a student.
09.21.07
08:55
I digress. Looking at my own portoflio and reading this great post remind me of something for which I am eternally grateful. At PCA, thanks to the likes of Ken Hiebert, Hans Alleman, Christine Zielinsky, and more, I received a spectacularly good design education. And it was an education that somehow managed to go far beyond the formal lessons of making dot, line, and type compositions. That Basel-based education might have caused us all to end up with similar-looking graduate portfolios, but it was a great platform from which to begin a design career and to find our own ways in the world.
09.21.07
08:58
Dear Michael,
Such a generous move! And really exciting that so many of your works still seem so exciting and fresh. As a designer i find it interesting to force myself keep on doing things that can stand the test of time. As a design teacher I see it as a great thing to show to any design student today. Thank You!
Minja Smajic, Stockholm, Sweden
09.21.07
09:14
It's great to see someone's school work, coupled with the knowledge that they have become and extremely strong designer. This was a very welcome Friday article!
09.21.07
10:21
09.21.07
10:49
09.21.07
12:06
The work is pretty good, but we are looking for someone that is fluent in all aspects of the following software 3D Studio Max, After Effects, Acrobat, Bryce, Canvas, CorelDraw, Dimensions, Director/Shockwave, Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Flash, Framemaker, Freehand, FrontPage, Golive, Illustrator, InDesign, Infini-D, LiveMotion, Pagemaker, Painter, Paint Shop Pro, Photoshop, Poser, QuarkXpress, Ray Dream, Shockwave / Director, Powerpoint, and Word. And you must be an expert on multiple platforms. It would be helpful if you are familiar with CAD. And you also need to be a write and edit in html, xml, write and edit Perl, Java, JavaScript, ActiveX, ASP, CGI, databases and of course are familiar WC3 web standards.
Oh, and the starting salary is $14,300.
09.21.07
04:48
09.21.07
04:59
-onur
09.21.07
05:19
09.21.07
06:25
I really appreciate you cracking open your old portfolio for us to see. I'm 4 years out of school and trying to escape the gravitational pull of direct marketing. I recently pulled out my school portfolio (since very little of what I've worked on recently would get me into a design firm) to see what still works, what needs to go, etc.
Your portfolio was very beneficial for me because it's a great example of what a great student portfolio looks like. I can only refine my hand-inked elephant so much and it will still look like a student project. Ditto my hand-inked typographic designs. (Shout out to Ray Morales and Mac Magelby of the University of Utah for keepin' that character-building tradition alive, baby! May they continue to resist the pressure to add dreamweaver to their curriculum!)
Now, as I burn my midnight oil, I have a better, clearer vision of what my portfolio needs to be. Thanks again.
09.21.07
06:57
as a 45 year old I headed to the local junior college to go from being mom to graphic designer in a small town about one hour from Cincinnati, one hour, if you go a bit over 70mph on the back country roads in the forgotten state of the tristate area.
One of the first lesson in fun de mentals class was don't show up to interviews with a cheap portfolio. The teacher, who despite being a junior college "professor" was quite keen in his knowledge and teachings, meant it in more ways than one. I'll give him full credit on that. He was that kind of multiple meaning professors. Anyway, you state here that yours was faux leather.
I gotta laugh. For the first presentation i ever did in class I, being the smart alec I was and still am, showed up with my very first official results from the dark room packed in the cheapest portfolio i could buy from a office supply store. On the outside I wrote, magritte style typography:
this is not
a cheap portfolio.
The professor laughed as soon as I stood up. From there on out, I had to outdo myself with each and everry presentation with some cheap, but well thought out, trick. In the end nothing came of it. Instead I went blogging to show a work in progress portfolio instead and saw many of my ideas become inspirations for work that came to life, too bad it wasn't by me as i could have used the money.
Shame all that 3-d natural talentapplied to programming efforts was wasted, too.
09.21.07
08:34
I don't suppose you're selling prints of the Gorilla?
09.21.07
08:47
I have to say, that commercial paper brochure came out of the extra strength tube of International style Modernism... jeez that thing lept out of the screen... beautiful!
09.22.07
09:31
09.22.07
04:11
what a difference in us, lugging those damn things around town and to interviews, as compared to well-all digital-online portfolios...
I still think every design student should have to buy one of these monstrosities, and then navigate it though streets, cars, doors and up elevators to interviews.
...and then keep moving them 30 years later.
Many thanks for a memory-provoking piece!
09.22.07
04:20
09.22.07
04:39
Are you hiring? ;)
09.23.07
02:53
Dear Michael,
Such a generous move! And really exciting that so many of your works still seem so exciting and fresh. As a designer i find it interesting to force myself keep on doing things that can stand the test of time. As a design teacher I see it as a great thing to show to any design student today. Thank You!
Minja Smajic, Stockholm, Sweden
09.23.07
05:20
I have gotten rid of most of mine because they were mostly print-outs. The ones I have kept are the pieces created by hand.
Do you still have all your foundation color studies? I can't throw any of them away because of the amount of time I spent on them...
09.23.07
01:22
09.23.07
04:05
Michael, thank you very much for sharing this part of your life with us.
09.23.07
05:37
09.23.07
08:12
My 1983 portfolio from the University of Illinois looks almost identical, right down to the Plaka illustrations and swiss style cropped type on a square page assignment. Now I understand your interest in reviewing my portfolio when I landed on the Vignelli doorstep a few years later. I was impressed with your generosity back then, and I see that spirit still lives within you today. Thank you.
09.24.07
12:09
It's great to see how things were done in '79 - the year I was born! And how timeless good typography is. Students today could learn a lot from those pieces.
09.24.07
04:56
09.24.07
05:24
I graduated from University in 1997 and I think it took me about 4 years of professional work before I started to grasp good typography.
beautiful work!
09.24.07
12:07
VR/
09.24.07
12:34
09.24.07
02:59
09.24.07
03:12
09.24.07
04:25
It's not too late to take up crosshatching again. Please do.
-b
09.24.07
05:11
I remember many late nights at Philadelphia College of Art, BA, 1984. The smell of Plaka, the many sheets of Letraset strewn about the work area, the Luci, the stat camera. Those essential pieces of equipment seem like such dinosaurs now. The physical act of touching the type, of drawing letter forms, or setting cold type for the letterpress really asked young designers to be part of the "craftsmanship" of design. It slowed us down, but in a way that made us think about type as art.
09.25.07
03:17
09.26.07
01:55
09.26.07
03:51
09.26.07
05:31
I want that primate on a shirt.
09.27.07
12:52
09.27.07
06:45
I really can't imagine having to paint type with all of its subtlety. Maybe that skill, specifically, is somewhat obsolete now, however, to me it will ever cease to be impressive.
Also, pretty inspirational. Thanks.
09.27.07
03:07
09.28.07
03:59
Your taste is real fresh, color combination comes out very good....Specially i like the COPPELIA work
09.28.07
01:55
10.01.07
12:48
What's so refreshing about this peek into your old portfolio is the honesty and, of course, that sense of what you are as a designer now came from somewhere we can see. Most illustrator/designers would just as soon let the dead art remain in storage.
When I look at what remains of my old stuff I find only a few worthy of ever showing, but then I lost most to Hurricane Katrina... (nature edits.)
Thanks for the look.
10.01.07
01:17
10.01.07
04:54
10.01.07
11:31
10.02.07
01:07
10.04.07
11:38
10.04.07
02:51
10.05.07
11:51
I was in the class of '74 at UC in what was then DAA. (The 'P' was added later.)
The program was rigorous but worth the effort and perseverance. It has served me - and my clients - well for many years.
Thanks for sharing, Michael.
PS: For a time we both commuted on the Hudson Line, but I've relocated to Kingston NY.
10.05.07
12:35
10.06.07
05:50
I've come late to this discussion, so I can skip all the ass-kissing and go straight to my associations with my architecture education: In architecture school we're taught that following the latest fashion (as presented by your professors), is "creative" and "innovative" and "individual."
We see this today in the avant-garde -- but how is it "avant-garde" (or individual or innovative) to do exactly what your teachers tell you?
10.08.07
12:11
10.09.07
10:48
10.10.07
04:25
I really enjoyed reading your article. It reminds me just how scared and excited I am to start the job searching process in less than three months. I am a senior design student at Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. I graduated high school in 2000 and thought that I had everything all planned out. I was going to go to college to be a veterinarian and finish it all in under 8 years. It sure is funny how life can take us in many different directions.
After taking an extensive array of science and math classes and switching majors several times over, I find myself nearing the end of my collegiate academic career with more anxiety than I began it with. I guess some people might call me well-rounded when it comes to the many academic disciplines that I have experienced. Maybe even a regular renaissance man, but for some reason I don't feel like one. For the past three years I have plunged myself head first into CMU's bachelor of fine arts program with emphasis on graphic design. I have taken what seems like a countless number of art classes such as 2D and 3D design, drawing classes, typography, logo and identity, webdesign, motion graphics, multimedia design, color and composition, and many others. I have had a great time during my four years and learned a lot about myself and my design ability. I am not afraid to admit that I don't know everything there is to know and I have never considered myself to be a standout student designer, but I have every now and then tooted my horn when it was necessary. I am confident that I have what it takes to find a good job fresh out of school, but there is always that "what if I don't" voice that gets me nervous inside. I am sure that things where a little different for you when you first went job hunting, but what things if any did you learn from these experiences? Anyone, may feel free to comment on this question.
I have a portfolio (a metal box with a clear see-through window on the top part that lifts off) I spent about $200.00 on not even a year ago. It is amazing to me how the times have changed and what employers now expect. In it I have carefully put together works of what I consider to be fairly strong in their own individual rights and what I hope to be eye-catching work to any possible employer prospects. I was told by my advisor to select about 10-15 strong pieces that demonstrate my abilities in print design, logo and identity design, webdesign, and multimedia design. I have covered all of these areas and have about 3 examples of each. Is this what employers typically look for?
What advice if any can anyone give me on how to go about preparing for entering the design job market. It is such a competetive field, especially here in Michigan. What can I expect to encounter and how do I handle these situations? It is one thing to hear it from professors, but another from those who have probably been there many times over. Any other students who are fresh out of school and have been here and done this feel free to respond.
I will end my post by giving Mr. Bierut a well deserved congrats on finding a job so fast and sticking with it all these years later. I can only hope that I get so lucky. I am sure that feeling nervous about leaving the academic nest is normal and that I will eventually learn to adjust without it over time.
Thanks for reading.
10.11.07
08:13
10.12.07
11:54
I think many people are overstating modernist work by grandfather designers like Wim Crouwel. I don't write this with disrespect but we should understand the processes of early Graphic Design and appreciate its roots but not re-apply it in this contemporary society. No offence Michael, but the poster you did for the Ballet lacks personality. It holds that restriction of geometry and using Helvetica.
I find it in real conflict when Wim Crouwel says he loves modernism and he doesn't like people changing typefaces. If anyone is intelligent to realise that Wim was born in an era which embraced Swiss Modernism such as yourself. But times have seriously changed. Graphic Design to younger people is about developing an intricate style where Illustration and Graphic Design are merging to together to create this exciting playfulness where there is no boundaries. Why should there be any boundaries within Graphic Design?
I feel a lot of designers have to somewhat obey supposely divine laws of graphic Design by Massimo Vignelli and so forth. Michael, I like your early work and what you have contributed for design but i don't consider you my idol nor personally a designer I really like.
10.14.07
06:12
I guess we can't all do what we love. I've been passionate about design since age 9 and the following fall, I'll probably going into some generic career path.
You're so lucky! :)
10.14.07
07:49
Hand painting type should be something every design student should try. You can learn more rendering a single typographic phrase in ink or paint than you will setting a hundred other phrases digitally. I recall that my first attempt as a design student was Walbaum 374, using gouache on stretched cartridge.
10.18.07
10:15
My Presentation Book looks worse.
Don't let Robert Plant see that Illustration of him.
The Silhouetted Hands are most interesting breaking up space and tell the true story and carry the eye to Robert Plant.
I hated carrying around those Presentation Books.
I always enjoyed people walking up to me asking me was I an Artist or Designer.
Never quite mastered the art of inserting multiple pieces in the portfolios.
The most embarrassing thing that can happen, you layout the work at home and mount it as you want to present it during the interview. After you get to the interview and open your portfolio all the work has come un-mounted and begin sliding around in the Portfolio.
Back to your work. Such an Eclectic Sampling of your Brilliance.
I'm curious to know as a trained Illustrator did you include samples of your illustration with your Modernist Design.
I was taught when pursuing employment, show one or the other, meaning Illustration or Design depending where you were looking for employment. Better to research the market.
Traditionally, Designer(s) had Biases against Illustrator(s) and Illustrator(s) had Biases against Designer(s).
Most Designers were using photography as a means of expression and didn't patronize illustrators.
Illustration in and of itself is an Independent Career with very few staff position, if any. Very few corporations or agencies during the time you graduated employed staff illustrators.
That was a deterrent for me not pursuing a career in illustration.
Your Strong Suit in Illustration No Doubt
was your ability to Convincingly Render.
I'm also interested in what area of illustration you were interested, Cover, Editorial, Corporate, Advertising, etc.
The names you mention Bernard Fuchs, Bob Heindel, Mark English were definitely Realist.
Bernie Fuchs the most experimental and expressionistic of the group you mentioned.
Patrons of Design Observer unfamilier with the Legendary Bernard Fuchs can find him here in a Special Issue devoted to his work.
http://www.illustration-magazine.com/latest15.html
You didn't mention Bob Peak as an influence. Bob Peak combined Illustration and Flat Color, Graphic Silhouetted Imagery in his Illustrations and advertising Art.
Bob Peak and Bernie Fuchs were Best Buds and both signed their names in the same writing style.
Special issue of the Legendary Movie Poster Artist / Illustrator Bob Peak can be found on the same site different link.
http://www.illustration-magazine.com/latest6.html
Jerry The King Kuyper who is also an Alumni of University of Cincinnati won the Print Cover Design Contest when he was at University of Cincinnati fifteen year before you.
I mentioned this to The King some time ago. He had the NOIRVE to ask how I knew about the Cover Contest he won with Print Magazine.
My reply. Is there anything I don't know???!!!
Andrew Knew, then Art Director of Print Visual Taste was more in tune to Modernist Design opposed to Illustration.
Wrong Choice for the Print Cover Contest.
Great Stroll down memory lane. Computers have Glamorized our Profession to the extent and belief by non designers anybody can do it.
I submit to you, if the kids today had to cast off, count character, use a haberule and do the math. There wouldn't be as many people wanting to pursue a Career in Design.
DM
The Hostile Takeover of Corporate Identity
10.30.07
01:52
11.03.07
08:48
http://allgraphicdesign.com/graphicsblog/2007/10/01/how-to-create-a-traditional-graphic-design-portfolio-yes-with-an-actual-case/
I have subscribed to your feed.
Thanks.
Rachel
11.08.07
10:11
11.15.07
05:20
This encourage me to pick up some of my work that, I am proud of and did my best on, that didn't quite live up to what I expected (either get low marks from teacher or not win competition). Of course I still go see my professors to ask how I can improve them into a portfolio-worthy piece, but prior to this i wouldn't even bother.
01.16.08
09:02
07.11.08
07:43
Eric, we're looking into the problem. The Editors.
07.21.08
09:53
It is very much fun if we can do the things we really love.
10.15.09
05:20
I had the same assignment as a student, but to use the simplified shape as a basis for a logo design. And I still use this assignment as an instructor today.
12.15.09
05:26
12.30.09
12:35
I too grew up in your home town and at Kent State University I the same shock of going from high school cross hatch to the swiss design.
Another big shock for me was to go from a 2b pencil to a fat messy piece of charcoal in drawing class.
Your work does show a mind that sees the world in ways that is truly unique. Like you "professional" work you have continued to apply your unique vision to a corporate world that tends to shun creativity and risk for designs paths that are well traveled.
Always inspired. Thanks.
01.25.10
12:10
05.03.10
07:29
07.18.11
12:52
11.15.11
10:09
11.16.11
08:48
11.16.11
02:25
11.16.11
02:36
11.17.11
11:40
Thanks for pointing me in the direction of some interesting topics lots of food for thought (although some of the links are broken). It was interesting to read about your progression and personal creative development having just begun an illustration degree. It is interesting to see how people progress and change paths. I also enjoyed the historic aspect of the article. Things have changed a lot in 30 years so it is useful to bear in mind how processes affect style.
‘high design didn't always play well with the regular folks.’ I have to admit that I find some design cryptic and esoteric at times. Is this a naked emperor thing or am I missing some subtle nuances?
Thanks for a good read.
11.17.11
02:58
11.17.11
03:17
11.17.11
05:53
I especially liked the piece where Michael designed a brochure for commercial label paper and used that style and technique 30 years later for the Saks branding. It shows it has not gone out of date if it can work so many years later and that it is a strong piece of type.
11.17.11
05:57
11.17.11
06:07
11.17.11
06:13
11.17.11
06:17
Thank you, this has inspired me in my own designing process.
11.17.11
07:05
11.17.11
07:18
11.17.11
07:23
11.17.11
07:48
11.17.11
07:53
11.17.11
07:56
It's also nice to see that not everybody knows what they'd like to specialise in at first but that you found you were directed towards typography with your work as such, as a design student this gives me a lot of inspiration to explore more styles of work and ways of doing my work.
Each of the pieces are very inspirational, as is the text, a very nice read.
11.17.11
07:59
It's good to know that other young designers find it hard to get out of the comfort zone. In this case it was clearly beneficial - " how eerily the cropped label artwork anticipates the packaging I was to do for Saks Fifth Avenue" shows that the techniques one is trained in become a natural working method for said person.
Yeah, generally inspiring!
11.17.11
08:22
Reading this from a professional that has been around many many years really puts you out there as an amazing role model, thank you!
11.17.11
10:47
11.17.11
11:19
Sometimes butting to much detail into a design can be overpowering and I think this is what I have learnt from this.
Each of the pieces of type are very nice as the text is easy to read. I also like how you have combined illustration and typography in your designs.
11.18.11
02:36
11.18.11
02:53
11.18.11
03:49
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04:13
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04:20
11.18.11
04:47
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05:03
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05:17
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05:24
11.18.11
05:36
The Cincinati Ballet competition entry kind of reminds me of Peter Savilles poster work for the Hacienda and Factory Records.
11.18.11
05:43
One of the things that I thought was important whilst reading this
was that you're not always happy with your work, and can admit when it can be improved. Thanks
11.18.11
05:51
11.18.11
05:53
He states that maturing as designer has made him wiser, that in the unknown lurks the risk of failure. This gives me the impression that Michael may be unwilling to take risks anymore a trait that I think can produce good work and is a shame he has lost. Saying that though taking the risk as a young designer has obviously paid off for him and has made him the designer he is today, working for pentagram and recieving very high honours in design, shows he is doing something right.
11.18.11
05:59
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06:13
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06:24