Thursday, November 25, 2010

Monday, October 25, 2010

mistakes

Beddow & Battini by "MONUKI BY MONUKI"

Initial idea and the processes














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cooperating "Beddow & Bettini" Logo




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Connect two images into one



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Flyer design

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Final Design: Beddow & Bettini "The Street" poster and flyer






Thursday, October 21, 2010

Repeat After Me

Finalrepeatcollege by yukiman

Kinesphere from Miglena Minkova on Vimeo.


Kinesphere is a collaborative response to a brief set by Alex Reuben, which examines the notion of repetition.Heavily influenced by dance and choreography, Kinesphere uses movements sourced from mundane activities such as grocery shopping and transforms them into a graphical representations. By simplifying and tracing the patterns produced by those movements, dance notations are created and represented in a painterly manner on a screen.
The music produced for the film is sampled from supermarket environment and mixed into a rhythmic pattern which compliments the pace of the visuals.


Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Moving Wallpaper


We’ve been working with Wallpaper magazine for the last few weeks on a special collaboration for their current edition featuring the work of director-playwright-artist Robert Wilson‘s imagery.

The project was inspired by one of our favourite examples of future magic in practice; the Asahi Shimbun Moving Newspaper. Dentsu Inc. used the pre-cinema French technique of Ombro Cinema to transform every advertising space in a special edition of the paper into moving image. The effect, which is similar to that of a zoetrope or lenticular, is entirely analogue: when passing lined acetate over images printed as frames, the images appear to animate.

It was a bit of an enchanting an experience in its own right, but caught our imagination further by using an old, obscure technique to redesign a weary advertising medium and create something new and surprising. Media design at its best.

For this month’s Wallpaper, Dentsu London’s Camille Bozzini spent a solid week in a room with Junichi Harima who joined us from Osaka to help with the technique. Which on the face of it, you might imagine is simple. In practice it involves staring at and fiddling with lines on screens for painstaking hours on end. A millimetre’s difference in the space between frames on the paper can make a massive difference to the overall effect, so it’s a labour of love to achieve the optimum experience.

You can find the result on the cover of the current edition of Wallpaper and throughout the magazine. QR codes also lead you to further films from Robert Wilson of Isabella Rossellini, Brad Pitt, a sumo champion and some snowy owls.


Asahi Elephant from Dentsu London on Vimeo.


Junichi Harima: The Technique from Dentsu London on Vimeo.