A visual directory celebrating some of the finest art directors and their craft. Of course any such compilation is wholly subjective and will understandably, elicit equal parts curiosity, delight and surprise. However for the purposes of this post our criteria has been: Those operating from the 1990's - when print and
A visual directory celebrating some of the finest art directors and their craft. Of course any such compilation is wholly subjective and will understandably, elicit equal parts curiosity, delight and surprise. However for the purposes of this post our criteria has been: Those operating from the 1990's - when print and
Dylan Farrow puts on his pants every morning one leg at a time, just like everyone else at the Kerrigan Advertising Agency. He handles high-pressure projects with a fast turnaround. He's prized for his keen intellect and admirable performance. But how did he get where he is today-to the level of Junior Executive of Design Production? Well, that involves how he takes his pants off... And for whom... Hoping to break through the glass ceiling under which she's been trapped for years, Valerie Caplan picks up her life and moves to Seattle. After hearing about the position of Senior Executive of Design Production from an art director at Kerrigan, she decides to apply. When she lands the big interview, she never thinks for a minute that she'll have any serious competition. She assumes that she has the job in the bag...until she discovers that the only competition has something she doesn't have-the willingness to go outside the office to impress Danica Stewart, their uptight female boss. | Author: Dahlia Salvatore | Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform | Publication Date: Aug 17, 2016 | Number of Pages: 266 pages | Language: English | Binding: Paperback | ISBN-10: 1508502463 | ISBN-13: 9781508502463
Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Mel Gibson and Robert Downey Jr have all had their fair share of run ins with the law but their mugshots never looked this good.
Ulric Collette is a self-taught photographer from Quebec, Canada. He studied art and graphic design at school and currently works as an art director for Collette, an advertising studio in Qu…
Amazon Kindle will help dyslexic students concentrate on the joy of reading, rather than their frustrations with it through simple, groundbreaking technology.
Geometry Global of Hong Kong recreated painting masterpieces with Lego bricks. Maybe they tinted the bricks after the fact in Photoshop, but the effect is still great – they are…
In his hilarious ongoing photo project, advertising art director Matthew Vescovo ruins the cringeworthy cheeriness of stock photography by digitally
Design You Trust
Agencies have taken many approaches to creating memorable gun-control ads. Grey Toronto's latest work for Moms Demand Action, opposing an open-carry gun policy in Kroger supermarkets, is thought-provoking—and notably restrained by category standards. A pair of minute-long radio spots use actual recorded phone calls in which Kroger employees try to explain why people can openly carry firearms in the store, but pets and kids' scooters are banned. This approach could easily have veered into mean-spiritedness, but the conversations never make the employees sound foolish. These folks are, after all, not the policy makers.