früjch me baby one last time
June 29, 2008
The last poster I did for früjch. Feeling the definition of bittersweet. Always thought it was a sappy word, but am feeling it now…Sappy me.
This poster began as wanting to do something colourful to cap off the final day of früjch and being visually-loud enough to grab attention the heap of emailers that all SMU students receive each day. My Adobe PS was also going wonky on me, so decided to try something new that day. Something that required as little PS-ing as possible!
Besides, weird as it might sound, I genuinely do like tearing and pasting scraps together. I find it highly therapeutic. It’s also what I always do to wrap presents. I think my friends have come to expect / resigned themselves to that as my de rigueur wrapping paper. But that’s another story.
Started off with a blank sheet of A4 paper and my favourite stack of CATALOG & JUICE to rip into (how convenient we got them delivered to früjch eh! Happy days!).
The thing about sticking + scrapping (or whatever it’s called. Calling it “scrapbooking” seems inappropriate since I’m not making a book. “Collage”? Perhaps. Alright, let’s call it “collaging”) is that it’s a trial-and-error process.

Sometimes you think a scrap is going to look good, but when you juxtapose it against the next scrap, it doesn’t work. You’ve already stuck it on? Doesn’t matter, just stick the next piece over. The more pieces the more textured the feel and the greater it looks. Of course, that’s provided you don’t make a gazillion mistakes. Then you might as well throw the piece into the recycling bin or use it as a pillow.
Lots of fun to work with different materials as well. Brought in some thread, graph paper and a ballpoint and started doodling the words out. Ah yes, the title “Früjch Me Baby One Last Time” is courtesy of JonnyBaBonny once again, from the ever-surviving (what did Shal say Trent called her again?….Ah yes,) Brit-Brit.
I usually use sequins, buttons, markers, crayons, twine, ribbons and rubber stamps too, but some were too chromosome XX, while others I just didn’t have the time to dig out : I remember I had 8.30am class the next day and it was already 11.30pm.
Once all was done, I stuck it onto the scanner, adjusted it to the max dpi for sharpness and pressed the button. It’s amazing how fun the scanner can be. Only downside is that it squashes everything flat, but that can be easily remedied by shoving a book or so at the corner as a makeshift wedge so the lid doesn’t come down fully.
Next it was off to adjusting the contrast (higher, so that the shadows could be seen), increasing saturation for the Reds, making the colours richer and then adding the text in PS (which decided to behaved itself for awhile). Had to crop quite a fair bit off as well.
Things I would change now if I could:
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The date, “April 4”, spelt out with the threads is not clear. Perhaps should have used more contrasting colours.
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Although visually-pleasing, as a message, it might not have enough symbolic meaning. In other words, there is not enough depth.The question would be: “Where in the images put together behind does it suggest it’s früjch’s last day? Is it relevant?
(Which makes me wonder, should every advert you do have depth or is it sometimes enough for them to be pretty and attention-grabbing? I know you can say: Great Adverts Have Depth-with-a-Captial-D, but how often does one come up with truly groundbreaking ads? Should ALL adverts be like that? Would that be too heavy? Do you need normal ads to recognise great ads? I must think. Must retreat into mountain and ponder.)
Things I like about it:
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Took me only about an hour or two to get everything done. And it was FUN!
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It’s colourful and I do so like riots of hap-happy colours.
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I think it brings across the quirkiness and fun of the früjch culture.
…And that was the birth of the last früjch poster!
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my favourite ad: Levi’s Dangerous Liaisons
May 22, 2008
WHAT?
Levi’s 2007 Collection Launch Ad: Dangerous Liaisons
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WHEN?
According to Digital Arts, this Dangerous Liaisons ad was launched somewhere in mid-Feb of 2007.
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WHO?
Here’s the genius team behind it:
Agency: BBH, London
Creative Director: Caroline Pay
Agency Producer: Davud Karbassioun
Art Director: Steve Wakelam (art direction), Dean Wei (typography)
Production Company: Rattling Stick
Director: Ringan Ledwidge
Producer: Sally Humphries
DP: Alwin Kuchler
Post Production: The Mill, London
Audio Post: Aaron Reynolds @ Wave Studios, London
Offline Editor: Richard Orrick @ Work Post Production, London
Music: “Strange Love” by Little Annie (see below)
Filming location: Prague
The cast:
Male character: Raphaël Personnaz
Female character: Léa Seydoux
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Levi’s Europe website used to have the making of Dangerous Liaisons posted up, but unfortunately when I check today, they had already taken it down.
Pity, because it was enjoyable to hear what the people at bbh had to say. Luckily, I – the ever conscientious student (not) – had taken down some notes. Here’s what some of them had to say:
Nigle Bogle (CEO of bbh):
“This campaign is about the new seasonal looks at .. . showcasing in a way that acknowledges it’s coming from the Original. This is what we are as Levi’s, we’re not trying to be anybody else…”
Caroline Pay (Creative Director):
“Receiving a brief for a campaign is always exciting. The times when you get a Levi’s brief, you times that by ten.”
The brief given was described as “two-fold”: Making original people feel great in Levi’s and reinstate Levi’s as the original jeans. bbh aimed for the big thought that Levi’s could have that would run for the next 5 , 10 years.
They hit on the idea of a simple time travel story that would show the history of Levi’s, but still keeping it “sexy, playful, fun” – important aspects in the Levi’s brand.
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MORE INFORMATION
Awards/Nominations:
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Cannes Lions – International Advertising Festival, 2007 (Gold Lion ) for Clothing, Footwear & Accessories
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CLIO Awards, 2007 (Bronze) for Apparel/Fashion
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Nominee for UK Screen Association The Conch for 2007 commercial of the year
Soundtrack
STRANGE LOVE by Little Annie
The soundtrack for Levi’s Dangerous Liaisons is “Strange Love’ from Little Annie’s Durtro Jnana album ‘Songs from the Coal Mine Canary’ .
Little Annie Songs from the Coalmine Canary at Amazon.com
Strange Love
by Little Annie and Antony Hegarty
Once I had a strange love,
a mad sort of insane love,
a love so fast and fierce,
I thought that I would die.
Yes once I had a strange love,
a pure but very pain love,
a love that burned like fire through a field.
And once I had a strange love,
a publicly acclaimed love,
the kind of love as seen in magazines.
And once I had a strange love,
a beautiful and vain love,
a love I think that’s better left in dreams.
Strangers love,
Strangers love
And once I had a strange love,
A morally inflamed love,
We’d go on holy battles in the night.
And then there was that strange love,
that vulgar and profane love,
the kind of love that we don’t talk about.
Yes once I had a strange love,
a lying infidel love,
who wove in stories like Scheherazade.
And once I had a strange love,
a flaky white kiki love,
we ran so fast
we almost spilled our guts.
You see I’ve had some strange love,
some good, some bad, some plain love,
some so so love,
so what?
and c’est la vie
But just let me proclaim love
that out of all this strange love
You’re the strangest love I’ve ever known.
Presentation
The short 10 minute presentation I totally burnt midnight oil for!
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Credits
Song lyrics taken from Duncan McLeod’s TV Ad Land. Thanks Duncan!
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Social Media Breakfast Logo Feedback
May 21, 2008
What feedback did I get on the first version of the Social Media Breakfast (SMB) logo?
I must say I’m quite relieved.
The comments on uniquefrequency and twitter were encouraging, which I’m appreciative of. Doubly so because I haven’t even spoken to some of these people before. So thanks Daryl, Claudia, nadnut, Krisandro, juzzywuzzy and parkerha for saying you liked it or that it’s fab! All of you made my day.
Of course, one can’t improve without constructive feedback. So like a kid that doesn’t want to face the monsters under the bed, but must be brave, I showed it to my boss. (laughs)
He suggested making the SMB clearer and using a handwritten type to match the sketch. Initially I thought that would be too messy or illegible when scaled down, but time to try again! He also recommended to incorporate a social media element into it.
The last point was something I should have thought about or tried harder to put in. VEEERRYY important for a logo to represent EVERYTHING the brand stands for. As a marketing student, I logically knew that, but let it slide in the face of time. Bad. Shouldn’t have done so.
I really should have given myself more time and did more drafts.
Hindsight is ever perfect. Big sigh to that. Have also learnt if I’m stuck, I should leave whatever I’m designing at the moment, and come back after a while, so I can look at it with fresh eyes.
(Why do fresh eyes make me think of Cows, Farmhouse milk and butterflies?)
And I’m still a bit nervy about offering to design things for people when I don’t have any background.
Well, no background beyond Frujch and fiddy-diddling around photoshop…… photoshop…ah, that reminds me, Quentin says I should be using Illustrator instead. Time to find a copy. Bye bye Yusof Ishak; hello Hole-in-My-Wallet.
But really, I need to get a grip and just try every damn thing I can design so that even if I don’t succeed wildly, I learn something in the process of doing it. That’s what those motivation speakers always say right? “TRY TRY TRY! ”
Alright, up & on, me!
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Social Media Breakfast Logo v1
May 21, 2008
3 weeks back, Daryl (uniquefrequency) wrote that a logo was needed for Social Media Breakfast (SMB). Figuring there was nothing to lose, I told him I’d try. And may I add, with a very big bright smile at that.
Obviously, for the next 2 weeks, I kicked myself due to… the usual reasons:
1. OMG-I’VE-NEVER-DONE-A-LOGO-BEFORE.
2. I was literally running between filing & extracting patient files at TTSH (another grand story all together), work @ Qube and social media summer term
3. Daryl would end our 11 years of friendship over (possible) birth of ugly logo.
Okay.
I was kidding about the last one.
Anyway, I never managed to sit down and work properly on the logo, but thought about it while I ate lunch, was on the train, in the toilet, in the lunch queue… and doodled here and there.
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Even though I doodled quite a while on this idea, I wasn’t totally comfortable with it.
It was both too wordy (with the whole phrase “social media breakfast” spelt out) and kiddy. In the end, I didn’t tried it out with proper fonts in Photoshop.
I guess I never got around to doing it because the idea didn’t settle fully with me. Felt like I was missing something or needed to take something out.
That went on for a few days, before yesterday night which I had set as my absolute final deadline.
So while I was in the shower, with the mantra “INEEDTOGETTHATLOGOTODARYL INEEDTOGETTHATLOGOTODARYL” running through my head, it struck me: the letter ‘S’ sort of looks like a cup handle.
Perhaps all that shampooing massaged my brain the right way.
(Note to self: To try shampooing again to test above hypothesis)
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MAIN IDEA #2: SMB integrated with a coffee cup + saucer
It was already 11pm so I had to hurry. Drew variations of wide cups, tall cups, narrow cups, cups without steam, cups with shading, sketchy cups, proportionate cups….
It was my dad that mentioned it looks like a person). On hindsight, I realise perhaps it’s only one of the sketches (left, circled in red that did and it’s hard to see so in the final result.

After scanning the design in, I cleaned up the sketchy-cup, making the lines a bit bolder, darkening, sharpening and played around with font colours for the SMB text.
And the first version of the SMB logo was done!

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Are Designers Useful?
May 17, 2008


Some question its feasibility, others wonder about its mission authenticity while even more are just… sceptical about the whole project. Check out OLPCNews – it’s an independent site giving a variety of opinions on the subject – or Wikipedia for a quick overview.
For me, I just think it’s remarkable how design contribute so greatly to humanitarian efforts. Remarkable and relieving.
I was following the news on the China earthquake last week, thinking,
“People are
dying by the thousands, medics are helping, rescue teams are risking their lives, volunteer organizations are rallying, humanitarian forces are provided food aid ….” Everyone was being useful and I couldn’t figure out where design had a place.
It felt like the old debate about the arts being a luxury – how basic necessities called out to be satisfied before one could appreciate Mozart or Les Miserables or that $XXmillion sculpture.
I’ve always disagreed, taking the stand that the arts are the part of life for enjoyment, that if you were poor, watching a play could make you forget your worries for that period, ensconced in a alternate reality.
But the China disaster casted doubts and made me wonder if all that thinking was too naïve. If you’re a doctor, you could help. If you’re a fireman, you could help. If you’re a designer…….
Where’s the part of designers in disasters?
Are designers useless?
OLPS’s initiative reassured me that it wasn’t so. Designers do help, but in a beforehand, behind-the-scenes as opposed to in the actual situation.
That rescue tool kit? A designer made sure it’s as efficient and compact as can be. The $100 computer? It’ll increase learning-interest, subsequent literacy rates and build a more progressive nation. (A bit grand of a statement, but you know what I mean.)

Instead of helping in the now, the designer helped out then to make sure the situation later would be better.
So while not all designs contribute to the good of the world, it’s enough that there are some great ones that do.
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How to Design Your First Job
May 11, 2008
Recently, I picked up a copy of CMYK* #40 because one of its features, Get the Design Job You Want, caught my eye. I guess I heard an inner voice yelling, “Hey lost sheep, you need this!”
But how much could an article tell me?
I’ve seen self-help books a 100-pages thick that claim to “clinch that perfect (fill in the blank) job” or “chart your path to your dream occupation”. When I flip through them in the library, they either leave me laughing to myself or in despair.
Why? Because you’d have to be the perfect human specimen to get all of it right.
So excuse the scepticism – something that doubled when I realised that the article was only 4 pages long. I was expecting a manual of golden rules, even though logically I knew it was a magazine. Yes, please to meet you, Illogical is my middle name at times.
However, in the end, the limited length of the article worked in Jeff Domke’s ** favour. It was succinct, it got me thinking and he delivered what he said he would – shedding light on how to make the right moves to get that job you want.
And he would know, because for his first 14 months, he made all the wrong moves before he finally learnt to make the right ones. Saving us from learning it the hard way, he gives us 10 Steps:
(Note: Not the full article)
1. Define the job experience that you want
- What kind of designer do I want to become?
- What work environment is best for me?
- What’s my unique value?
- What do I want to learn next?
2. Learn from the masters
- “Never Eat Alone” by Keith Ferrazzi
- “All Access: The Making of Thirty Extraordinary Graphic Designers” by Stefan G. Bucher
- What risks should I take
- How does my fear influence my search?
- What will happen if I give up?
3. Get great photographs of your design work
4. Film yourself presenting your portfolio
5. Go here the jobs are
- Which cities specialize in a certain type of design?
- Which cities hire many junior designers/
- How poor can I stand being?
- How much time can I spend searching for a job?
- How can I quickly connect with local designers in a new city?
6. Join the AIGA and get involved
7. Go on 3 studio tours
8. Win a design competition
9. Find Your weakness, and improve on it
- Does every project I make look the same?
- How is my attitude? How is my ego?
- Do I understand the business of design?
- Can I present work well?
10. In conclusion, start over
“Every time I thought I had failed, I was actually learning how to perfect the job-hunting process. Eventually my growing knowledge and abilities caught up with my job ambitions. Yours will too. Just start over…. Just keep pushing forward.
Take big risks, make big mistakes and design everything you want in life”
Domke’s article is a good start to anybody wanting to go into the industry. Answering all the questions he poses is a daunting task, but it gave me a structure to work with rather than floundering around.
I know I don’t have to kill myself and answer all the questions before I try out for that first job but at least now I know how to go about it and will be more prepared.
I’m on my way to start with #1 tonight.
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* A design publication that states its sole intention as “presenting outstanding student creative”
** Jeff Domke is an award-winning graphic designer. As a former internship coordinator for Landor Associates & an AIGA mentoring director, he has gained firsthand insight into the challenges of today’s emerging designers.
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