So, I’ve been working quite hard figuring out how I will tie everything together and i have to say I’m getting close. Today I’ve redesigned ‘Teen Dream’ from Beach House. I’ve made a version of the album a while back but I’ve decided to redo the whole thing.
Mainly because I realised that the way the previous design was made, wasn’t what it was supposed to be. There needed to be more than just a nice pictures with some typography. it’s all about choosing the right color, the right typefaces (or in this case, create one of your own) and combining this with the right image.

Below is the front of the cover. All the albums should be done between now and two weeks. so then it’s off to get printed. I’m definitely going to post them’ all up here when they’re ready!

 

Schermafbeelding 2014-05-21 om 22.52.42

I’m redesigning the Drums’ album ‘Portamento’ into a limited edition box.
One of the extras will be a huge posters that you could fold out and hang in your room. Thought it would be nice to post that one online. Feel free to comment

Schermafbeelding 2014-05-14 om 12.50.30

 

 

Jack White released his new album Lazaretto on vinyl and it’s nothing like the usual vinyl record you know. The Ultra LP, as White likes to call it, offers a set of unseen features that intensify the experience of listening to a vinyl:

• Side A has an outside locked groove so the record ends in an infinite loop.
• The record plays from the inside out. So to start listening you’ll have to put the needle where the record normally ends.
• A floating angel hologram appears when the light reflects on the record from the right angle.
• There is a hidden song under the label sticker which you can play without removing it.
• The record consists of songs at three different speeds.

What can service designers learn from this?

Jack White really understood what vinyl lovers cherish so much. The Ultra LP isn’t about a better quality of sound, neither is it about reinventing vinyl. What the Ultra LP does, is to create a super experience for super vinyl fans.

Vinyl lovers don’t just listen to music, they turn it into an experience. They love it when they have to touch their music when they take the record out of its sleeve. They enjoy the artwork that has the size of a small painting. They put the needle in the groove and appreciate the cracky, analogue sound that comes with vinyl. Much like a concert it consists of a number of rituals and symbols that lets them experience music in a more special way.

source : https://medium.com/user-experience-101/3b995c3986a4

Jack White’s innovations create an ultra experience for vinyl lovers. The whole ritual becomes even more special and less automated. It breaks the routine and it becomes a discovery. Now the listener has to think where he puts the needle and how he plays the record. He can look at the record spinning from different angles and see different things. Or he can let it play for a day in the infinite groove. If the Ultra LP were a car, it would be a Rolls Royce.

This is so cool, it’s nice to see it going in the opposite direction for a change
(Note: meaning from online blog to print form)

Taken from It’s Nice That.com

 

In the era we grew up in we’d sadly missed the golden age of music magazines. TheNME had long since lost the relevance it once prized so highly, Rolling Stone was similarly falling from grace and we had to battle with a slew of dubiously-written metal titles like Rock Sound and Kerrang! who championed some truly terrible bands (though maybe as an ex-goth that’s a problem specific to me). But then we foundPitchfork at just the right time, pointing its fingers in the direction of excellent new music and embracing the kind of critique that most had abandoned in favour of indie celeb-spotting and Smash Hits-style boot-licking. And it was all available for free on the new-fangled internet.

Nearly two decades on the Pitchfork powers that be have decided the title shouldn’t just be confined to the digital world and have made their first foray into print, publishing the inaugural Pitchfork Review in January 2014. It offers an experience unlike anything the online version has achieved so far, replacing up-to-the-minute music news and interviews of time-specific relevance with a slower form of journalism designed to let music lovers in on some extraordinary narratives and ideas from the vaults of music history.

It’s an impressive undertaking for an online publication that looks and reads very well indeed, bringing something truly exciting to music journalism’s table. In honour of their first edition we pitched a few questions at Pitchfork’s creative director Michael Renaud to find out about the highs and lows of birthing a print publication into the world.

You’ve been an online mag for 17 years, why does now seem the right time to move into print?

Well, we’ve been talking about it for years, and this just happened to be when all of the stars kind of aligned to the point that we were able to make sense of the concept. We felt it should be something of value that didn’t necessarily exist anywhere else, and we wanted to feel comfortable with how it was being made. We knew people would ask us why, and we wanted to make something that would answer the question for them once they had a chance to see it.

What’s the main thing you’re trying to achieve with the new title?

In the first issue Simon Reynolds wrote a piece about his experience with music magazines growing up, and crystalised the specific relationship one can have with that object. Much of that special connection was tied to discovering new music for the first time, which is obviously more difficult to accomplish in print today. The moment when you find out about something new and interesting is often kind of the heart of that experience. So we believe that’s still possible to do, but the focus should be on that very love and attachment to music; what’s permanent, what isn’t necessarily new but possibly underappreciated, and also what’s happening now that we’ll remember for years to come.

Tell us a bit about the process of taking Pitchfork into the physical world.

Many of us come from print backgrounds and have a lot of love for the craft. We’ve been able to carefully put together our plan and workflow in the best way we know it’ll work for our funny little team. Deadlines are a lot more real here, and there is no CMS to save you once you hit ‘“publish.” But we’re all having a blast!

What did you get wrong along the way?

Subscriptions are a difficult thing, especially internationally. The Review has more of a book-like weight than a traditional magazine, and we’re doing relatively small runs. So costs associated with postage are the biggest challenge so far. And there just aren’t many systems in place to accommodate for the expectations of someone in 2014 that has maybe never subscribed to a magazine before. It takes four to six weeks for delivery – the lead time helps to keep costs as low as possible. I wouldn’t say it’s something we got wrong, we just haven’t been satisfied with the options that have so far presented themselves. But we’ll get there.

What were the highlights?

Working with Palmer Printing has been a great experience; they’re the last printer on Printer’s Row in Chicago, which was the printing centre of the Midwest beginning in the late 1800s. And they’re still a small, family-run operation that’s been there since the 1930s. Being able to get to know them face-to-face and to be there for regular press checks has been awesome, and I’m proud that we’re able to have it made so close to home.

Now that the first one is ready and out there do you still feel it was the right decision?

Hahaha! Well, yeah man! There hasn’t been a moment yet where I’ve gone “OH NO WHAT HAVE WE DONE?” so I guess that’s good. In many ways the first issue was a dress rehearsal in the sense that we just needed to make sure we could get through it all, and now we can play with nuance and the format we’ve set for ourselves. I think we’ll be pretty critical and try to improve with each issue.

You’ve got a great selection of illustrators and photographers in there. Tell us about a few of them.

We invited photographer and filmmaker Nabil Elderkin to our first Paris festival in 2011, and he took a lot of really great photos. We’ve had them for a few years and this seemed like the perfect way to publish them for the first time. And yeah, almost too many amazing illustrators to mention: Sterling Bartlett, Michael DeForge, Patch Keyes, Tim Lahan, Hannah K. Lee, Brandon Loving, James McShane. We’ve got pages of comics from Ron Regé Jr, Simon Hanselmann, Sophie Goldstein, Paul Hornschemeier, and Johnny Sampson painted the most incredible tribute to Al Jaffe with a MAD fold-in rip-off.