Posts tagged Cover

Notes

M&M’s ad <3

M&M’s ad <3

Notes

The Economist heeft deze week een stand-up comic versus een horizontal prime minister op de cover. Ik krijg ergens het idee dat ze Italië niet meer zo serieus nemen.

The Economist heeft deze week een stand-up comic versus een horizontal prime minister op de cover. Ik krijg ergens het idee dat ze Italië niet meer zo serieus nemen.

254 Notes

newyorker:

Illustrator Birgit Schõssow on learning that her image would be on this week’s cover: “For a German illustrator, the goal can seem so very far away. Now, I’m so thrilled. I’ve never made an image with so few things on it, and there it is.”
 
Click-through for a slideshow of past New Yorker covers about winter sports: http://nyr.kr/YzAF1F

Brilliant <3

112 Notes

De Time van deze week: geen foto, enkel een rode achtergrond en een mooi lettertype. Zo simpel, zo krachtig. De cover rechts is een klassieker uit 1966.
timemagazine:

For this week’s cover story by Joe Klein about the loss of his parents, we designed a graphically simple cover.
It marked the first time in more than a decade (spanning more than 500 covers), that only typography with no image appeared inside TIME’s iconic red border.
The headline ’How to Die‘ on a solid red background echoes the magazine’s iconic ’Is God Dead?‘ cover from April 8, 1966. That cover, which the L.A. Times named one of the 10 magazine covers that ‘shook the world,’ was the first type-only cover in TIME’s history.
It used a variation of the Bodoni typeface on a solid black background and was an extreme departure from the small, limited type treatments featured on the cover the previous 34 years.
To illustrate this week’s story, however, we stayed closer to our established visual language — the headline was set in Franklin Demi, one of our family of typefaces.
While we wouldn’t necessarily call it divine inspiration, several have drawn comparisons to the 1966 cover. And it’s certainly rewarding to know we can continue to uphold TIME’s storied 90-year visual history.
-By D.W. Pine and Skye Gurney

De Time van deze week: geen foto, enkel een rode achtergrond en een mooi lettertype. Zo simpel, zo krachtig. De cover rechts is een klassieker uit 1966.

timemagazine:

For this week’s cover story by Joe Klein about the loss of his parents, we designed a graphically simple cover.

It marked the first time in more than a decade (spanning more than 500 covers), that only typography with no image appeared inside TIME’s iconic red border.

The headline ’How to Die‘ on a solid red background echoes the magazine’s iconic ’Is God Dead?‘ cover from April 8, 1966. That cover, which the L.A. Times named one of the 10 magazine covers that ‘shook the world,’ was the first type-only cover in TIME’s history.

It used a variation of the Bodoni typeface on a solid black background and was an extreme departure from the small, limited type treatments featured on the cover the previous 34 years.

To illustrate this week’s story, however, we stayed closer to our established visual language — the headline was set in Franklin Demi, one of our family of typefaces.

While we wouldn’t necessarily call it divine inspiration, several have drawn comparisons to the 1966 cover. And it’s certainly rewarding to know we can continue to uphold TIME’s storied 90-year visual history.

-By D.W. Pine and Skye Gurney

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