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Sooooooo… Bye, Bye, Miss Shepards Pie

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After 5 years in London. I’m leaving. I’m leaving POKE. I’m leaving London. I’m leaving England. I’m not leaving Europe, though.

Willow and I have had thoughts for quite some time about “going somewhere else for a while“. I, being half Swedish half Italian; living in England, have had the fortune of working and living in an unfamiliar culture and therefor find a lot of insight and enjoyment in the smaller things. Willow, on the other hand, is half English half American living and working in England.

When we’ve discussed about potential destinations we have loosely talked about New York, San Francisco, Vancouver, Oslo, Zürich and Genéve. The tricky bit has been work and languages. I speak three languages (Swedish, Italian and English) and Willow speaks two (English and French). We agreed that for both of us to learn a new language would be too much of an undertaking. I think the strongest contender was Vancouver.

But then I suggested Willow should apply to a masters at Konstfack in Stockholm, Sweden… and she got in!

The program, titled Experience Design, is a interdisciplinary course over two years.
Sounds amazing and i’m jealous.

So, in August, Willow and I are moving to Stockholm.

We still haven’t found a place to stay. So anything is of interest. We are probably looking for something in the outskirts, but that’s cycling distance to Sodermalm. Preferable a part of a villa with a garden for the cat and parking for the car we are planning to buy and drive over.

I am also in need of a job. So again, anything is of interest. I am looking for opportunities to work with creative people on challenging projects. I am open to all possibilities, that require an experienced online / new media person. This includes, digital agencies, freelance, client-side and advertising agencies.

Willow will probably be up for some freelance between all the studies as well, so please have a look at our portfolios, Willows on doublevay.com
and mine on portfolio.nuzzaci.com.

I’m really exited about all this. It definitely spiced up 2008.

Obviously i’m extremely sad about leaving all my friends and POKE behind. 5 years is a long time. You don’t stay in one place for 5 years unless you really like it.

I know from experience that it’s hard (or even impossible) to keep in touch when your living far apart, let alone in another country. It’s true you know — long distance relationships never really work out. My friends in Sweden know that. So does my ex-girlfriend. But with some people there has grown a special bond, and i’m sure that when i’m over in the UK, we will pick up where we left off as if I’d never even left. My friends in Sweden know that. Not sure my ex-girlfriend does, though. ;)

V&A Village Fete

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For the 4th year running, POKE will have a stall at the V&A Village Fete. It’s always tons of fun, so I suggest you all cancel whatever plans you might have for Friday the 27th and Saturday the 28th of July and come on down!

V&A and Scarlet Projects present Village Fete, the contemporary take on the traditional English fete. Over 30 of the most inventive and dynamic creative individuals working in the UK today come together to create an extraordinary array of stalls offering games to play and products to win.

more info at the V&A website

Pee, Poo & Häagen-dazs

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haagen-dazs.gifNicolas Roope over at VI-R-US just posted a comment on a mobile application called MizPee. MizPee finds the closest, cleanest toilet and gives you entertaining reading material once you get there. As Roope says; Basic yes, but quite handy.

MizPee reminded me of a similar idea I had a while back called PTDB (Public Toilet Data Base). The idea was to build a database filled with information (location, rating, comments etc) on public toilets. Basically the same as IMDB (Internet Movie Data Base) but for toilets.

The idea was born during a visit to the toilet at Häagen-dazs on Leicester Square, London. It’s an absolutely fabulous toilet.

So, if you find yourself in central London and in need for no. 2, go to Häagen-dazs on Leicester Square. You might need to order an ice-cream before using their facilities, but it’s worth it. If it’s panic, just throw a few quid on the counter.
The toilet is on the ground floor.

In my world, something ugly can be right.

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This on going debate about the quality of the Olympic logo, and how the media has decided to play the public’s opinion, has gotten on my nerves in quite the same way that the english media is obsessively handling the Formula One rookie Lewis Hamilton. I feel a need to share my opinion on both the logotype and on the McLaren super-sensational super-rookie, starting with this post on the logotype.

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The lack of visual craftsmanship; not good. Epileptic colors; not good.
No, the logotype is not aesthetically appealing “for 5 pennies.”

However, does that then mean that it is a bad logotype?
Is it one of the primary functions of a logotype to look good and blend in?
What is the primary purpose of a logotype?

As a Londoner I have to say that the logotype is the best thing that has happened to the 2012 Olympics up to this date. Until the logotype got presented two weeks ago, the Olympics had only been about miscalculated budgets and east London property prices.

Now, post logotype launch, all of the sudden people are standing behind the Olympics. Protecting it. It’s about Our Olympics. Yeah, it’s Us now, not just Them anymore.

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The logotype used for the bidding process (shown above), designed by Kino Design, with The Thames flowing through the word London, is probably what most people expected to be the logotype, or that the official one would go down these lines. But, with all due respect, that logotype has as much of a back bone as disco music, Helvetica, Back Street Boys and Kate Moss.

No thanks.

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Alternative options of the logotype has been floating around the web during the week. The one most people seem to be sending around is the one displayed above on the left, designed by Daniel Eatock.

“Look into my eyes, look into my eyes, the eyes, the eyes, not around the eyes, don’t look around my eyes, look into my eyes”

The one to the right was designed by Winkreative for an interview on BBC Breakfast show.
Like they say, brilliant minds do think alike.

A small update: Willow pointed me to an interesting post on this subject and I thought it was worth coming back and update this entry. The interesting post is titled Long overdue post about the London Olympic 2012 logo and is written by Ben Terrett over at Noisydecentgraphics. Ben and I seem to be on the same side of the fence on this one — the side that likes the logo — but besides that, he touches on things I haven’t and that ties in with Tyler Brulé being on the BBC Breakfast show.

Which brings me on to a wider point. Whether you like the logo or not the way our industry has responded to this has been dreadful. Using terms like “knocking up” on BBC air time don’t help designers win more boardroom time. Not liking the logo is one thing, but comments like “£400k? My kid could have done better…”

end of update

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Looking back, Montréal and Los Angeles had graphically nice logotypes, and München graphic profile by Otl Aicher was stunning and i’m sure if they ever have an Olympics in Bern, Zürich or Geneva, everything would look very Josef Müller-Brockmann’ish like — graphic designers would get a hard-on and base their next design on it and others would look at it, nodding in agreement, concurring, thinking ‘yes’, and then just get on with it.

But london is london.

Stephen Bayley said in an article in this weekend’s Observer that Wolff Olins had underestimated the public’s taste. I think the public shouldn’t underestimate the competence of a professional branding agency either.

I do believe that the logotype designed by Wolff Olins will get the job done. It’s not like Wolff Olins don’t know what they are doing. They are professionals. And as any good client we should trust them and let them do their job and support them in their decisions.

I’m prepared to put my balls on the table and say in 5 years time the logotype will have the public on it’s side. By then, more values will have been poured into the logotype and the branding will be more established and finalised. The shock will have passed.

All the attention that the logotype has created and received does suggest that Wolff Olins has succeeded in getting people involved and engaged.

Yeah, In my world, something ugly can be right.

something for the search engines.

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I’d just like to alert all search engines and their mighty crawling robots to register a small warning to anyone who’s searching for a dentist in east London.

Subject: Wanda Lissowska at Dentessential 75 Curtain Road, Shoreditch, Borough of Hackney, London, EC2A 3BS.

Outline: The warning is based on a visit I took last week to the clinic to sort out severe (se·vere: very great, intense) tooth pain. She x-rayed and did a regular check without finding anything out of the ordinary. She thought it could be that the filling was too big, so every time I bit, the filling aggravated the nerve (the tooth’s pulp tissue). She polished a bit on the filling and told me to give it three days.

A few days later I visited an emergency dental clinic.

The pain was caused by the fact that the old filling had managed to infect the tooth’s pulp tissue and had killed the tooth. The dentist at the emergency clinic didn’t even need to x-ray me to determine that. What I needed was a root canal treatment and not three more days of pain.

I’m no professional ‘dentist critic’ - so forgive me if I’m being harsh and out of line in my judgment - but I do live under/with the impression that a dentist - good or bad - should be able to determent if a tooth is dead or alive. Especially if the client directs them to the exact tooth that seem to cause the sever pain.

NOTE: The warning doesn’t include all dentists at Dentessential. I have many colleges and friends who are very pleased with other dentists at this clinic.

Motorway Map of England, Scotland and Wales (Inspired by the London Underground map)

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Inspired by the London Underground map, created by Harry Beck

0044

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Exactly three years ago, I wake up at my ex girlfriend parents / formally our old summer cabin outside Skelleftehamn. The night before this morning some of my friends had held a farewell party for me there - waving me goodbye as I was about to leave for my 7 month long internship in London.

That was three years ago.

So I arrived on Tuesday the 19th of August 2003. Karl Tyselius meet me at Edgware Road tube station and told me the latest gossip of the flat and London as he walked me home to the flat at Frampton Street.

My first evening in London was spend with really nice friends in a Italian restaurant on Edgware Road. I had carbonara, a glass of red and it cost me £7.

Below is a piece of text I wrote for my then current website a few months after I arrived… or more exactly 890 days ago. I quite like it, and I do believe it belongs in this post.

If you are about to call someone in this country, and you not happen to be in it yourself - the story begins, like this one, with 0044.

In this weird 0044 country, were people still insist on driving on the left side of the road, I will stay (not until they realize that driving on the right side can be quite a good idea, nor until they start to use the metric system I, or others by the way, can understand and find useful, but…) for a while.

The hard truth is that you will not find me back in my beautiful home country, country 0046 (normal traffic, metric system), for the next -890 days.

Until then - take care, and don’t hesitate to begin the 0044 story sometimes to drop a “hello” or a “how are you feeling today my good old friend?”, because I may need it from time to time (It’s not because I believe I will miss 0046, my friends and family that much - I’ll survive, it’s more…) to make sure that everything is still fine outside the protecting walls of the land where people like Blair, Tracy Lords, Liam and Noel pay their taxes, the land of James Bond and Roger Moore, the land with the number zero zero four four.

Isn’t It Ironic, Don’t You Think?

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To be honest, I wished someone would ask before they decide to go off and try to break a record (which I’m, against my will, is participating in!).

Britain is sweltering on its hottest recorded July day as temperatures hit 36.3 near Gatwick Airport.

It is also the hottest day of the year so far, beating Tuesday’s 2006 high of 33.2C (91.8F).

Several schools have closed, workers are being encouraged to dress down, and elderly people and young children are being warned to drink plenty of water.

British temperatures this week have exceeded such holiday destinations as Malta, Athens, Bermuda and Rome.

/BBC News: Heatwave breaks record for July

I’m currently listening to Beach Boy’s Greatest Hits…
… and the headline on the project I’m currently working on is saying:

Countdown to Christmas: Magical Christmas markets

That’s just wrong.
We have no air condition.
I’m sweating.
I’m listening to Beach Boys Greatest Hits.
Headline, please shout up.