Last week I completed a logotype for the very cool band called Lux. They are a soulful pop/indy/folky 4 piece and they wanted a memorable logomark that would work at various sizes, for posters, press shots and flyers to badges. As their music is diverse in style, I wanted to create a classic mark that didnt pigeon hole them in terms of style, and went for bold, clean lines with a clear flow to the overall shape of the mark, and a little distressed edginess to it. As always, I started with lots of sketching and playful mark making, eventually working up a few chosen concepts on the computer before presenting to the band for review and cleaning up the final design.
LUX are opening the BURYFields festival in June and are releasing an EP later this year, you check out their facebook page here.
(Photo courtesy of Catherine Davis)
Wednesday, 25 March 2015
Wednesday, 18 March 2015
Workaid - Inside the workshop
Something
new and a bit different for the blog today. This will be the first in
a new segment on the blog called 'places and spaces' looking at
interesting workshops, studios & creative spaces.
Recently
I was lucky enough to get a look behind the scenes at the Workaid
workshops, in Chesham and to see the fantastic work which they do
there. The Workaid building was historically an old boot factory, and
I think it's fitting that it continues to be filled with people doing
traditional and skilled handiwork, making and mending.

Its
hard to do justice to the scale of the operations at Workaid and the
vast amount of interesting objects; these pictures are merely a
snapshot. With only 4 paid staff, 3 of which are part-time, in the charity, the whole operation is supported by a team of dedicated volunteers, some of whom are
retired engineers and crafts people. One day they may be sandblasting
rust from a pile of donated chisels, the next taking apart a mysterious
vintage tool to see how it works and repair it, giving new life to many
interesting and forgotten objects. It's brilliant! Anything that is
beyond repair is carefully taken apart for recycling or selling as scrap
metal. Items unsuitable for shipping are sold in the Workaid shop or at one of their legendary forecourt sales. Vintage and fleamarket enthusiasts take note!
The
workshop is a 2 floored hive filled with bountiful shelves, drawers,
boxes, piles and crates. Rows of vintage typewriters, a host of old
sewing and knitting machines, a 50's electric drill here, a 20's sock
making machine there...crates overflowing with hammers and mallets of
all sizes, a wall of neatly organised saws, a huddle of rakes, spades
and hoes, a room of bikes & lawnmowers. Every nook and cranny is
peppered with an eclectic mix of other interesting objects and
ephemera from past and present. There is so much to discover, I could
have stayed there all day. The density of the collection is broken
only by pockets of workspaces, benches with glues, tapes and tin
cans, radios and mugs of tea. The whole rich aesthetic is one that I
love, and the smell of sawdust, oil and metal is strangley nostalgic
and comforting to me. I'm reminded of my time spent at the puppet
workshop, of fiddling about in my gran's button box as a child and of
watching my Dad at the end of the garden in his homemade workshop; he
was always making or mending something or rolling about under a rusty
car.
Swamped
in an abundance of bits and bobs I was amazed how organised the whole
place was (though they were too humble to agree with this!)
Everything, no matter how small, has a place or a drawer with its
name on it. So much so, that when the packers are tasked with putting
together the goods for a project, they have a shopping list of items
and can go around collecting everything they need, ticking them off
as they go.
In
addition to the workshop, the forecourt sales and the Workaid shop,
they also hold 'craft and coffee' mornings and hold sessions for
teaching the learning disabled useful skills within the building.
They are a very enthusiastic and inclusive charity that succesfully
engage with both the local community and those many miles away. They
certainly inspire me to keep making and mending, recycling and
reusing, and to keep learning new crafts and skills. The hard work
and generosity of the charity and the volunteers really is awe
inspiring - you should definitely head down to one of the forecourt
sales, follow them on facebook or twitter, and check out their
website for more information on the amazing work which they do.
Workaid are at The Old Boot Factory, 71 Townsend Road, Chesham, HP5 2AA
The Workaid Office, Workshop and Goods-in for tool donations is open
Monday - Friday, from 09.30 to 12:30 and 1:30 to 4:30
The Workaid Shop is open Thursday - Saturday 10 to 4.
The Workaid Shop is open Thursday - Saturday 10 to 4.
http://www.workaid.org/default.html
The next forecourt sale is Saturday March 21st - get down there and find some treasures!
Thanks
for reading!
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