Interviews with Tony Brignull and John Salmon about D&AD winner Neil Godfrey
Posted in: UncategorizedCopywriters Tony Brignull and John Salmon talk about why former partner Neil Godfrey received D&AD’s most awarded art director at last night’s D&AD special 50th anniversary awards.
Weather-Ready Gadgets (SPONSORED) – Stay Warm This Fall with These Handy Devices (GALLERY)
Posted in: UncategorizedBackward Heels – The Leanie van der Vyver Scary ‘Beautiful’ Project Depicts Odd Perfection (VIDEO)
Posted in: UncategorizedGrandmother India
Posted in: UncategorizedGrandmother is a design and communication studio based in Mumbai.
Is Grandmother India primarily into identity design and brand communication? What all services do you provide?
Grandmother India is a multi-disciplinary visual communication home. Grandmother nurtures imaginations to breed innovative creations that challenge conventional design standards. Strategic solutions, fresh perspectives and local designs with global aesthetics chalk out the best prescription to strengthen the aura of brands.
Our areas of expertise include:
• Consultancy – Brand / Retail / Online / Way ?nding
• Brand Identity Design
• Print Design
• Publication Design
• Packaging Design
• Environmental Design Solutions
• Way Finding Solutions
• Ambient Design
• Event Design and Communication
• Retail Design and Communication
• Online Communication Strategy
• Online Communication Consulting
• UI + UX Design
• Digital Content Generation(Video, 3D, Illustrations, Photo bank)
• RIA Website & Interface Development
• Interactive Multimedia Installation
• Online Promotion (SEO, SEM, SMM)
• Mobile + Tablet Web application
• Sound Identity
• Broadcast Design
• Sound Design
Tell us about your designers/animators. Did they go into fine art or design schools? How do you pick them up?
While most of our designers come from renowned design schools or applied arts institutes, we also recruit people with immense passion for great design, design oriented thinking and those who have an edge in innovative solutions. We conduct several rounds of interviews – virtual, face to face, with team leaders and then with top management. We look for a passionate and dynamic personality, people who are thinkers and equally good doers.
How would you define the design style at Grandmother India?
We believe that every problem is an opportunity and that every opportunity is a challenge, as we have very high standard of expectation from ourselves. We are our own competition so every project needs to be better than the last. We don’t box ourselves into a particular style as we believe in storytelling and every story has to be narrated differently. We deliver out of the box solutions for every industry and unique solutions for clients within the same industry.
Were there any particular role models for you when you grew up?
I really didn’t have role models growing up. Having said that, during art school the city of Mumbai was been a great source of inspiration. The same can be said for the Himalayas as well as I am from Uttaranchal. Both are very contrasting spaces, but both had great positive impact on my thinking. Within the art, design & digital industry the few inspirations I can name are M.C. Escher, John Maeda & David Curson, amongst others.
Any International design workshops?
I have conducted several international workshops in Brazil, Portugal, Holland as well as India at design conferences, design institutes, architecture institutes and business schools. I also try to attend many workshops as a participant as well
How has digital affected your traditional print design work?
The Digital Revolution has inspired & influenced the way we think for print design and we at grandmother believe that both media can complement each other and borrow the best participant from each other.
Do clients see design as a value addition to their products?
Since our inception it has be an interesting journey as we have influenced our clients by making them understand the importance of design and what value design can bring for their businesses. Now the industry leadership has somewhat evolved and the handholding part has become less of a factor. Having said that, sometimes we still have to elaborate on what value design brings to the table for them.
Do you wish we had a design event in Mumbai??
Yes, Mumbai needs lot more design activities. Not just big design events but also smaller workshops, discussions and presentations.
Who was the most influential personality on your career in graphic design?
My mother
What made you start Grandmother India?
When we started back in 1997 there were no design studios but only advertising agencies. I really didn’t like the prevailing business model concept at the time of ‘buy media and get creatives free’. I wanted to create a studio that truly sells intellectual property. Also I wanted to work closer with clients rather than working in a system of layered hierarchy in an agency. Lastly, I didn’t want to influence my thinking with an agency experience so I started Grandmother straight after of college. It has been a tough journey but an enlightening one.
How important is the focus on good design in Grandmother India?
We are in the business of design, so there is no question about the focus on good design. How our designs can drive greater business for our client is the most important factor for us at Grandmother. We believe good design should go much beyond just good looking design. We also feel responsible to create a better visual culture for people not just the clients, but client’s client and the public at large.
Are you working with any advertising agencies? Any brands?
In the past we have worked with very few agencies. Mostly we have worked more for brands.
What do you feel about the state of design in India? Do you feel that our collective aesthetics need to improve?
State of design in India is rapidly evolving and is taking great form but we have a long way to go to catch up to international standards. Designers can only be effective if there is a greater vision from the top down. Importance of good design needs to be understood by Influencers, policy makers, industrialists, government bodies etc. Lots need to done at grass root level.
Any other Indian graphic designers who you admire?
Locopopo and White Crow design.
What advice do you have for aspiring creative professionals? Would you advise them to take on graphic design as a career option?
Good Design skills will only prepare you to be standing in starting line of a race, but to run the race you need to be a thinker, observer, researcher, presenter, writer, and above all a sensitive person who understands emotions of other people. Design is a great profession but don’t restrict yourself to ‘a’ type of design field. If you think from your heart and emote from your head, design is the field to be in.
Who would your design team like to take out for dinner?
Themselves
What’s on the company iPod?
We don’t have one
Mac or PC?
Mac
Grandmother India can be contacted via their website here.
Books Talk by Publicis
Posted in: UncategorizedAdvertising Agency: Publicis, Mumbai, India
Chief Creative Officer: Ashish Khazanchi
Executive Creative Director: Vivek Rao
Art Director: Anant M Singarwadi
Copywriter: Sivaram Subramaniam
Client Team Director: Jayashree Mantri Easwaran
Photographer: Atul Patil, Shiva / Rentacam
Illustrator: Ramesh Nannware
Account team: Rohil Paralkar
Ranking dos países que mais fazem download ilegal de músicas: Brasil é o 5º
Posted in: UncategorizedEu nunca ouvi falar em Billy Van – estou ficando velho – mas ao que parece ele é bem popular nos downloads. Pelo menos é o que mostra um estudo encomendado pela BBC, através do serviço de monitoramento musical Musicmetric.
O número de downloads cresce menos em países que tem presença de serviços legais de música online.
A pesquisa – que corresponde ao primeiro semestre de 2012- revelou quais são os países com maior volume de downloads ilegais via Torrent. O Brasil está em quinto lugar: 19 milhões de músicas baixadas através do protocolo. Em primeiro vem os Estados Unidos, com mais de 96 milhões de downloads.
O ranking de pirataria musical mostra também quais foram os artistas mais baixados em cada país. O álbum “Talk that talk” da Rihanna foi o mais pirateado no mundo – totalizando 1,2 milhão de vezes.
No Brasil – e em outros três países (Índia, Romênia e Grécia) – o líder de downloads é o DJ americano de música eletrônica Billy Van. Uma das explicações seria o fato de o EP do DJ, “The Cardigan”, está licenciado para distribuição gratuita via Torrent, incentivada pelo próprio músico.
Segundo a MusicMetric, até 2015 o Brasil deve atingir o segundo lugar no ranking mundial de pirataria musical. Por outro lado, o estudo diz que o número de downloads cresce menos em países que tem presença de serviços de música online, como iTunes, Spotify e Rdio.
Resumindo: Muita gente prefere as alternativas legais se estas forem oferecidas.
Ainda de acordo com os dados da pesquisa, as gravadoras lucraram mais com a venda legal de arquivos digitais em 2011: 8% de crescimento, totalizando US$ 5,2 bilhões. Em 2010, o aumento nos lucros foi de 5%
A pesquisa da MusicMetric cobre mais de 750 mil artistas, e pode ser baixado na íntegra no site da empresa.
Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Pick n Pay: Sassi Bag
Posted in: UncategorizedPsynex Focusyl: President Vladimir Putin, Mayor Rob Ford, Kristen Stewart
Posted in: UncategorizedAdvertising Agency: Red Lion, Toronto Canada
Creative Director: Brett Channer
Art Director: Anand Iyer
Copywriter: Dave Pigeon
Account Director: John Schofield
Account Executive: Michael Coulson
Director: Sean Wainsteim
Producer: Isil Gilderdale
Production company: OPC Films
2012 Burnaby Blues and Roots Festival: Tweet The Blues
Posted in: UncategorizedTweet the Blues was a Twitter based campaign created to introduce the Mp3 generation to the blues and increase awareness about the 2012 Burnaby Blues and Roots Festival.
Advertising Agency: Spring, Vancouver, Canada
Creative Director: Rob Schlyecher
Art Director: Jeremy Grice
Copywriter: Ben Hudson
Programming: Trevor Blades
Blue Cross: Shopping, Fast Food Restaurant
Posted in: UncategorizedAdvertising Agency: mono, Minneapolis, USA
Director: Amanda Boyle
DP: George Steel
Production Companies: Academy Films, Circle Productions
EP: Lizie Gower
Producer: James Cunningham
Editorial: The Whitehouse
Editor: Steve Jess
Senior Producer: Melanie Klein
Color: Company 3
Colorist: Stefan Sonnenfeld
Finish: Drive Thru
Online Editor: Derek Johnson
Producer: Beth Wilson
Audio Mix: Echo Boys Music
Sound Designer: Tom Lecher
Mix Engineer: Tyler Tholl
Producer: Sara Davidson
Chicago Shakespeare Theater Sunday in the Park with George: Live Event
Posted in: UncategorizedOn Sunday, visitors at theArt Institute of Chicago received a slightly different cultural experience than they expected—a new temporary addition to the museum’s French Impressionist collection that had them scratching their heads. At the top of the Grand Staircase leading to the Impressionist Gallery, a full-sized replica of the iconic painting,A Sunday on La Grande Jatte–1884 was devoid of most of the foreground characters, leaving visitors befuddled by the strange new version. Then while they were trying to figure this oddity out, fully costumed characters from the painting emerged and sang a rousing rendition of the song “Sunday” from the musical Sunday in the Park with George, coming to the Chicago Shakespeare Theater at Navy Pier. It was all part of a joint effort by Chicago Shakespeare Theater and The Art Institute of Chicago to create excitement for the theater’s upcoming production of Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s musical Sunday in the Park with George. The Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical opens the Theater’s season, September 26 through November 4, 2012. After hearing the actors’ thrilling musical performance, patrons witnessed them cascade down the grand staircase, out the main entrance of the Art Institute between the iconic lions and onto a Chicago Trolley which carried them up Michigan Avenue, along the City’s grand Millennium Park, to Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Navy Pier. Only in Chicago could these two masterpieces have engaged in conversation with one another. Inspired by the Art Institute of Chicago’s famous Georges Seurat masterpiece, Sunday in the Park with George, tells the story of a painter’s struggle between creating art and living life. The Chicago Shakespeare production is staged by Associate Artistic Director Gary Griffin (The Color Purple, Follies) and features Jason Danieley as Georges/George and Carmen Cusackas Dot/Marie.
Advertising Agency: Leo Burnett, Chicago, USA
Facebook Tests Mobile-Ad Network, Challenging Google and Apple
Posted in: UncategorizedThe 100-Question Test You Have to Pass to Work in Sales at One Ad-Tech Company
Posted in: UncategorizedPolice Officer Busts Makeup Offenders
Posted in: UncategorizedBenefit Cosmetics has unleashed Chelsea Lately writer Sarah Colonna, dressed her up as a police officer, placed her on a Segway and charged her with handing out tickets to makeup crime offenders.
Colonna is blunt in her approach asking one woman if she can “order a hamburger of your face” because her eyebrows look like “McDonald’s arches.”
Crazy stuff. She even tells one woman her fake boobs are “ridiculous looking.”
Of course, the stunt aims to align itself with the brand’s tagline, Laughter is the best cosmetic.”
Hilarious SmartWater Video Exposes Jennifer Aniston’s Secrets
Posted in: UncategorizedIn a feat of brilliance, SmartWater has released a faux-security tape – introduced by Ryan Seacrest, no less – that offers us an inside view into Jennifer Aniston’s life.
In line with last year’s “sex tape,” her recent engagement to Justin Theroux and speculations of pregnancy, the video hits on all cylinders. Even Jimmy Kimmel makes an appearance as one of Aniston’s kids.
Charles Schwab Launches Creative Review
Posted in: UncategorizedWizard-Inspired Jewelry – The Harry Potter Lightning Glasses Ring is Made for Diehard Fans (GALLERY)
Posted in: UncategorizedVolkswagen Ad Aims to Give Americans a ‘Break’ From Tone of Election Year
Posted in: UncategorizedHubspot Does Gangnam Style
Posted in: UncategorizedHubspot is one of our favorite companies. Not just because of the wonderful people who work there but also because of the amazing marketing software they make that helps marketers easily tackle the social media waters and beyond.
Since 2008, the company has been creating parody-style videos, some of which have won awards. Each time they release a video, the up the anti on both talent and and production style.
The company’s latest release, is, of course, a parody of PSY’s Gangnam Style and it’s funny. Give it a watch.