When I sat down to design my new business card, I knew I wanted something that incorporated handmade elements and something textile-related. After a slightly agonizing brainstorming session (I wish I could say that this idea came effortlessly!) I thought of the string tying reminder and how appropriate that was for a business card. So this is what I came up with. After hundreds of punches, stamps, signatures, and bows I was so pleased that they were well received at the sale. The only thing I regret is not incorporating an image of my work somehow... I'll have to start thinking up a new version!
Wrapped up
Happy to be putting this commissioned stationery in the mail today! The flooding here in Rhode Island has kept me house-bound for the past few days, so I've been tying up the loose ends of various projects.
The next big thing on my radar is the RISD Spring Alumni Sale on May 1, and I'm doing my best to get my preparation momentum going. While I participated in several student sales, this will be my first time in the alumni sale. As a student I always looked forward to checking out the alumni; on the other side of the table I'm a little bit nervous! But I'm having a lot of fun working on display ideas, and ironing out the wrinkles on a few new products.
New Hymn Project
Cover illustration, graphic design, and photography for The New Hymn Project, a revitalization of old hymns. Webdesign for www.newhymnproject.com
Project Profile- World AIDS Day
logo design by Lawrence A. Hall
Some of the most memorable experiences of my time at RISD were the collaborative projects that I was fortunate enough to be involved in. I worked with a group of students to run a benefit for 2006's World AIDS Day at RISD. My main portion was to create an interactive art installation for the event. The main goal of the installation project was to communicate the scale of the world epidemic, but without making the viewer feel completely helpless.
The structural aspect of the installation was a large freestanding panel that was attention-grabbing without being overwhelming. It presented the information simply: "40,000,000 people infected with HIV/AIDS. What will you do?" At the base of the panel was a pile of little pillows. Each pillow was printed with the "Fight Aids" logo on one side and a practical way to help fight HIV/AIDS on the other. The tips were: get tested, fund relief, fund research, educate yourself, have safer sex, vote-lobby-rally, volunteer, and talk about it. A handout accompanying the installation provided further details into each of these tips. A poster (looking silly propped up on a chair, but doing its job anyhow!) suggested ways to use the fabric pillows.
The pillows were arranged in a pile representing the problem that would diminish as each person took one of the tips away. I painted the shadow of the pile onto the panel behind it, so that as the pile grew smaller and smaller over the week there was a way to measure the progress against the original pile. The installation remained in the 15 West lobby for the week following the event, and served as a prompt and reminder for student housing occupants, staff, RISD library users, and Portfolio Cafe visitors.
Yards and yards and yards of silkscreened fabric that could not have come into existence without the help of Chris Tolles and Will Reeves!
The task of assembling all the little pillows was undertaken by apparel students spearheaded by super-friend Andi Archer!
Sigur Ros CD Packaging
This morning I'm sharing a project from two years ago- a hypothetical package design of a Sigur Ros song called "Glosoli". I wanted to share this project quickly because, while I'm not completely satisfied with the interior of this design, I thought it would be worthwhile to show off the parts I do like.
"Glosoli" in Icelandic means "glowing sun" . After listening to the song a dozen times on repeat, what I remember being really struck by was the building up of tension and then a great sense of release. I chose to express this visually with a birdcage. The front cover shows the birdcage filled with birds. The interior (not pictured) shows the cage door swung open and birds streaming out across the sun- the CD decked out in gentle orange. The back cover is the empty birdcage.
Project Profile- Edafedd logo
This is a recent project I've done for an Etsy shop called edafedd. "Edafedd" is a Welsh word for yarn or thread, which ties in perfectly to the shop's products- crochet animal patterns. The shop owner's favorite animal and part of the inspiration for the product line is a whale, so it was important to include the whale tail's motif in the design.
I decided to create the logo by drawing with thread, a treatment I experimented with in a portrait of Leslie Feist. The thread travels across the store graphic and takes on the form of the whale tale, an analogy for the process of crocheting. I also created a simple watermark version of the logo that can be placed over product images.