Welcome to the Lavish Lounge

Tasty snippets from the Creative Services World, the Lavish world, the virtual world and even the real world.

Wednesday 10 December 2008

Carbon Disclosure

We were asked by the Carbon Disclosure Project to design their online Christmas card this year. Check it out. CDP Xmas

Sunday 30 November 2008

Reasons to be Cheerful

A new book about the life of graphic designer Barney Bubbles is out now. Reasons To Be Cheerful: The Life and Work of Barney Bubbles, by Paul Gorman, is a celebration of the creative legacy of one of the most mysterious yet influential figures in graphic design. Barney Bubbles work influenced a generation of graphic designers, including Neville Brody, Malcolm Garrett and Peter Saville. Bubbles designed sleeves for The Rolling Stones, Billy Bragg, Ian Dury and Elvis Costello to name but a very few. Bubbles committed suicide in 1983, leaving a body of amazing graphic design work, including videos and product design. Reasons To Be Cheerful is available from 4 December online and book stores. The forward is written by Billy Bragg.

Saturday 29 November 2008

Common Craft videos.

I really like the work that the two guys at Common Craft are doing. Through the use of short, entertaining videos, they make really complex subjects easily understandable. All of the videos use a white board and paper style of production, and copies are available to share online. For commercial purposes you can license hi-res versions, or even commission Common Craft to make a bespoke video. I like their philosophy of keeping the company small and the quality high, and am looking forward to future productions.

Thursday 27 November 2008

Uamou and Boo

The latest addition to my Japanese toy collection. This is becoming an expensive hobby.

Saturday 22 November 2008

Goodness and Happiness

The one thing we all know from the credit crash is that the way we do business will change. When we come out of the other side of this financial crisis we will have a new breed of organisation and a new way for brands to operate and communicate. Many old, slow and lumbering business will fall by the wayside. In fact, we're already seeing that happen. This presentation by Neil Perkin really sums up for me how businesses that are more open and honest and even generous will have better interactions with their customers. In a hyper-connected world the next generation businesses have a unique opportunity to really interact with the world in a totally different way. neilperkin

Do schools kill creativity?

Why don't we get the best out of people? Sir Ken Robinson argues that it's because we've been educated to become good workers, rather than creative thinkers. Students with restless minds and bodies -- far from being cultivated for their energy and curiosity -- are ignored or even stigmatized, with terrible consequences. "We are educating people out of their creativity," Robinson says. Robinson's point is well-made, and difficult not to agree with. A visionary cultural leader, Sir Ken led the British government's 1998 advisory committee on creative and cultural education, a massive inquiry into the significance of creativity in the educational system and the economy, and was knighted in 2003 for his achievements. I saw this brilliant film yesterday. It's nearly 20 minutes long, so get comfortable and watch to the end - it is one of the most inspiring speeches I have ever seen. I'm sure you'll enjoy it as much as I did. You can download it to your desktop if you want it to run faster. Source: TED

Thursday 20 November 2008

Website launch

Today we launched the new website for Callender Howorth, an amazing firm of London-based interior designers. The HTML and Flash site features some stunning imagery from their interior design comissions. Callender Howorth

Cooliris

I've been experimenting this week with Cooliris. Cooliris transforms your browser into a lightening fast cinematic way to discover the web. It's a bit weird to get your head round at first. Essentially it could potentially change the whole way we look at websites, providing a virtual 3D window to shopping sites or a 3D wall to discover a whole range of media. As I understand it, websites need to incorporate Coliris code into their sites to enable it to be viewed in the platform. But I'm pretty sure more and more sites will cotton on to this in the coming months. Download Cooliris now and have a play. Let me know what you think! Cooliris

Friday 14 November 2008

Busy-ness as usual

The past few weeks A busy few weeks as usual at Lavish Towers. We’ve been doing some video and sound editing for the IWM. We delivered 16 bespoke typefaces and helped one of our clients with some artwork and print consultancy work for a product brochure. We delivered some roadshow materials for a major communications organisation and are part way through a Flash website for an interior design company. In the next few weeks we’ve got a heap of InDesign templates coming up, some more print work for Public Concern at Work and a website for an amazing creative concepting team. So pretty much business as usual for our studio. We never know from one day to the next what we might be asked to do. But it’s all in a days work for one of London’s leading creative services studios.

Tuesday 11 November 2008

Web 2.0 women

Only a quarter of those involved in computer and mathematical occupations are women. And yet, in the ever-evolving world of Web 2.0, women have often been pioneers, redefining the way we interact online. Fast Company magazine has tracked down the most influential of these innovators. The most influential women in web 2.0

Plug in to NOW

Cool widget wall. Now

Saturday 8 November 2008

Degrees of separation

Interesting article on John Caswell's Just Think blog about how social media is challenging the '6 degrees of separation' theory. "Is it time to revise the old saw that everyone in the world is connected by just six degrees of separation? A study from French mobile carrier O2 has found that strangers are more connected to each other than they ever have been. According to the study, the average person is now connected by just three degrees within a shared “interest” or social group instead of six. In fact, it found that people are usually a part of three main networks: family, friendship, and work. O2 asked adults across three different age groups — 18-25, 35-45, 55+ — to make contact with random strangers from areas all across the globe using only personal connections. By linking their shared interests, the participants were able to connect to that person in three person-to-person links. Stanley Milgram originally coined the term “six degrees of separation” in 1967 to show that everyone in the modern world was capable of connecting to another by linking people and interests. But in today’s world of social networking, links between strangers are closer than in Milgram’s day. According to Jeff Rodrigues, a social networking specialist that carried out the study, 97 percent of the participants said they felt more connected to people today than they ever have in the past and for older respondents, email and mobile phones were the key factors in reducing the degrees of separation. But for those in the younger generation, Facebook was the main factor. Text messaging was also mentioned as an important component in reducing degrees of separation. “What the study has brought to light is that the way we now interact means it’s never been easier to make connections and build networks of contacts,” Rodrigues said in an interview. It should be noted that the research is not the epitome of a real scientific study — O2 paid for it, after all. And anyone who has a LinkedIn account knows that it is still easy to find plenty of people who are more than three degrees away from you. But the study does underscore something we all know: more so than ever before, everyone is connected (even if it is only tangentially). Maybe it is time to revisit Milgram’s study in a more robust way. It could help silence the critics who believe Facebook and the rest are nothing more than places for kids to waste their time. Let’s face it – how often will you find one service or industry that can totally transform the way people are connected? Just Think

Friday 7 November 2008

Showcasing Australian Creativity

Australian Edge is a really nice independent site maintained by Clayton West and Tey Vandenberg. The idea is simple: to promote Australian creativity in all forms. There's some beautiful creative work on here, along with interviews with designers, directors, animators and others. It's a real mine of talent across all creative disciplines. Australian Edge

True to type

My pals over at Made by Many have spotted a great series of postcards based on typefaces, and the subliminal messages we send out by using them. As an old-fashioned lover of type, and a member of the Metrotwin team, this article definitely hits the spot for me. You'll know from previous posts that last month we had the dream brief to create 16 new typefaces for a client. We take our type very seriously here at Lavish. Oh, and did I mention the fact I'm on a personal, one-woman crusade to promote the banning of Comic Sans forever! How do you say London in type? .

Thursday 6 November 2008

Facebook facts

Interesting information on who's using Facebook, and the opportunities for marketing that Facebook offers, which was published on my friend Iain Millar's blog this week. Who's using Facebook? .

Saturday 25 October 2008

Putting the sans in Comic Sans

Having spent many years despising both the use and users of the travesty of a typeface that is Comic Sans, I am pleased to report that the cause to ban it forever has been taken up. Since its creation in 1995, the typeface Comic Sans has enjoyed immense popularity among numerous digital type users including librarians, human resource managers, Powerpoint presenters, and Disney advertisement designers. The typeface has recently become so popular in fact that it has attracted the attention of several important typographic institutions, most notably the Foundation of National Typographers. A recent study by the FoNT foundation reveals some remarkable trends for the fledgling face. These projections are based on a scientific survey of long-term type usage trends and include a standard margin of error. The report finds that Comic Sans usage has steadily increased since 1995 at a geometric rate and is well on its way to becoming the most universally used typeface surpassing even Helvetica and Times by approximately 2018. Even more astonishing is the typographic event horizon predicted for the year 2027. The FoNT foundation has determined that according to these trends the only typeface anyone will use by the year 2030 will indeed be Comic Sans. STOP the march of the evil Comic Sans. Visit the Ban Comic Sans . website and register your support!

Sunday 5 October 2008

Big Stories Blog

We have recently launched a dedicated blog to support our Big Stories campaign, and to provide insight into great campaigns and news in the not-for-profit/third sector. Lavish has strong not-for-profit, brand, marketing and direct response experience. We have worked with leading charities, including Crisis, Public Concern at Work and the Carbon Disclosure Project, as well as some smaller ones throughout our careers. Big Stories is our dedicated not-for-profit campaign, showcasing our specialist offer and experienced team. If you want to find out more about Big Stories it has it's own website . The site is currently undergoing a design and content refresh, so it will change slightly over the coming weeks, with new content being added all the time. Lavish Big Stories blog

Saturday 4 October 2008

Nonsense

Slugs have 4 noses. Owls are the only birds who can see the colour blue. In 1386, a pig in France was executed by public hanging for the murder of a child No centipede was ever found with 100 hundred legs. Octopus have 2 legs and 6 arms. Ergophobia is a fear of work. Our eyes are always the same size from birth. that’s why some babies look like frogs. The ant can lift 50 times its own weight, can pull 30 times its own weight and always falls over on its right side when intoxicated. The flea can jump 350 times its body length A cockroach will live nine days without it’s head, before it starves to death. Butterflies taste with their feet. An ostrich’s eye is bigger than it’s brain. Starfish don’t have brains. Donkeys kill more people annually than plane crashes. You are more likely to be killed by a champagne cork than by a poisonous spider? Right-handed people, on average, live nine years longer than left-handed people Polar bears are left-handed. Oak trees do not produce acorns until they are fifty years of age or older. In ancient Egypt, Priests plucked EVERY hair from their bodies, including their eyebrows and eyelashes. A crocodile cannot stick its tongue out. You can’t kill yourself by holding your breath. Americans on the average eat 18 acres of pizza every day. Every time you lick a stamp, you’re consuming 1/10 of a calorie. You burn more calories sleeping than you do watching television. Cartoon from Savage Chickens Nonsense from Karlology

Friday 3 October 2008

We're moving

Due to expansion and our need for more space we are moving offices. Not too far, just down the road to Old Street. The new studio is going to be named the 'Lavish Lounge' so now it will exist online and in reality! More details next week.

Changing online behaviour to cope with credit crunch

There's some interesting research on how the credit crunch is affecting UK internet behaviour. The findings highlight three key areas in which UK online behaviour has started to adapt. 1. Consumers are searching for cheaper prices online No surprise there then that UK consumers are increasingly using price comparison and other discount websites to find the cheapest deals online. Following a 2 year decrease in traffic levels, UK Internet visits to retail price comparison sites increased by 20% between July 2007 and 2008. Similarly, searches for the summer sales have trebled this year compared with last, while consumers searching for discount vouchers have led to a 130% increase in traffic to specialist voucher websites. 2. Property searches have fallen, but traffic to House and Garden retailers has reached a new high The credit crunch has hit online estate agents hard: in August 2007, websites in Hitwise's Business and Finance - Property category accounted for 0.85% of all UK Internet visits, but last month (August 2008) this figure fell to 0.55%. Falling demand for houses is mirrored by consumer search behaviour, with UK Internet searches for 'houses for sale' down 53.1% between August 2007 and August 2008. At the same time, the share of UK Internet visits to websites in Hitwise's Shopping and Classifieds - House and Garden category increased from 0.49% in August 2007 to 0.59% in August 2008, overtaking the Business and Finance - Property category on the way. One of the factors behind the success of House and Garden retailers online has been the increase in online DIY queries, as UK consumers look to improve their accommodation on a budget. UK Internet searches for the top 10 DIY-related 'how to' queries have increased by 25% over the last 12 months. In August 2008 the top DIY search was 'how to plaster', followed by 'how to lay decking' and 'how to wallpaper'. 3. Consumers are shunning ethical consumerism in favour of energy efficiency UK Internet searches for ethical consumer products such as fair trade and organic have not increased over the last 12 months, but searches for energy efficiency terms, such as 'loft insulation', 'underfloor heating' have more than doubled over the last 12 months. Similarly, UK Internet traffic to the websites of gas and electricity providers has also doubled over the same period, as consumers hunt to find the best deal. Find out more about this research Net Imperative Source: Hitwise

Tuesday 30 September 2008

Metrotwin is live

Metrotwin, the British Airways powered online social recommendations resource I have been working on is now live. It's still in Beta, and will be for a while, but you no longer need an invite to get in. As I've mentioned before, Metrotwin brings the best of London and New York together in one place. Some of the key new features are: The Metrotwin Index - an attention-based, dynamically generated score that applies to every place in both cities on the site. When people pay a place attention it goes up, and when no-one’s interested it ticks down. Metrotwin Recommends - a new personalised recommendation panel within the user profile. It works by looking at everything you and everyone else have loved, saved, visited and reviewed - and it tells you the kind of places that people like you are interested in. The ability to add links to external services (Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, IM and Skype) to your personal profile City-wide map views - a nicer way to view. A Site Tour - to help you find your way around. Metrotwin has been delivered by a highly talented multi-agency team. Visit Metrotwin

Monday 29 September 2008

Drinking vessel

Two birds. One stone.

The Sewerside Chronicles

I've just finished reading a brilliantly funny book by Tim Lay. The Sewerside Chronicles charts the story of a small fashion label based in a seaside town in North Devon. Che Capri is approaching 30, and living the dream. He and 'business' partner Travis, run Sewerside – a cutting edge streetwear clothing label. It’s the Millennium and Sewerside’s quasi-apocalyptic sense of style has won plaudits from style magazines and the fashionista crowd. However, having hit it lucky with their first collection, the money’s now running out and their dreams of making it big are fast disappearing. But somewhere along the way Sewerside stops being about the money and becomes about an ideal. While the marketing buzz on the fashion streets is ‘keep it real’, Sewerside intend to do just that. As the business chugs towards financial disaster, The Sewerside Chronicles charts a hilariously painful campaign of manufacture, retail, black economics, trade shows, fashion circles, rural deviancy, violent demos, raves in the countryside, and anarchy at Glastonbury festival. Representing the hopes, fears and the naiveté of creative industry and protest idealism, The Sewerside Chronicles provides a humorous snapshot of a time when counter culture was all but swallowed-up by its commercial counterpart. This book is for anyone who's ever run their own business, tried to make a creative idea profitable or just generally likes to laugh out loud on the train while reading. There are some hilarious extracts on the website. Buy a copy today. Sewerside Chronicles Extracts

Thursday 25 September 2008

Metrotwin press interest

Metrotwin has picked up some nice press this week. Contagious

The art of Type

We are picking up a fantastic brief tomorrow – to create 16 bespoke typefaces. For a production studio whose roots are in the creation of type, this really is a dream brief. Typography is probably my most favourite of all of the creative services disciplines. The ability to convey words and messages through type is, to me, the most creative of arts. Not only that, but from a production point of view, the rigour and rules that surround the use of words really inspire me. For me, a perfectly kerned, beautifully crafted piece of typography is very hard to beat. There are some great groups on Flickr dedicated solely to the art of typography. Take a look at some of these: Found Type Typophile Vintage Type

Saturday 20 September 2008

At the court of King John

A beautiful portrait by my wonderfully talented photographer friend, Jorge Monedero, appeared in Luxx magazine in today's Times. The specially commissioned portrait of John Galliano captures the regal presence of this unique fashion icon. The portrait accompanies an article by James Collard. View the full article snd Jorge's fabulous image on the Times website Times Online Luxx magazine .

Friday 19 September 2008

Congratulations...its twins!

Metrotwin, the British Airways powered social bookmarking resource I have been involved with for 5 months has launched this week into an invitation only Public Beta. We’ve still got 2 weeks until the stabilisers come off and we go fully live, but you can now sign up to the site request an invite and join the community. Metrotwin is a fantastic resource which features the 'best of the best' from London and New York, recommended by the people in the know. We have been working with content partners, bloggers and of course the very talented multi-agency team to get great places recommended, reviewed and twinned. Team MT are more than a little bit proud of what has been achieved in quite a short period of time, and can’t wait to see how Metrotwin grows. Take a look at the blog or visit the site and get yourself an invite. Metrotwin .

Wednesday 17 September 2008

Dear Adobe

For anyone who has ever had anything to gripe about with their Adobe products, this site is for you. Dear Adobe has the best gripes on all of the Adobe products. My particular favourites from the top 100 being: At no 15: Could you make Adobe Reader start up slower? I'd like to have enough time to go get a sandwich before I read a one page document. At No 22: Adobe Updater is the single worst piece of software I have ever seen. Please fuck off with that. and finally: At no 55: Enable auto-recover for Photoshop, so when it inevitably crashes for the 9th time today I can get back to the corporate schlock I was working on. Read the full list and submit gripes of your own...go on, you know you want to. Dear Adobe .

Tuesday 16 September 2008

Mr Chips is dead

One man's dropped chip is another man's forensic investigation.

Saturday 13 September 2008

Cold War Posters and Exhibition

The V&A have produced a book called Posters of the Cold War, in conjunction with their forthcoming exhibition Cold War Modern Design 1945-70. The exhibition explores modern art, architecture, design and film in the period 1945-70, highlighting the ways in which artists and designers responded to the conditions of the Cold War. The poster was a key medium in the Cold War, used to produce both fear and loyalty at home and abroad. Posters of the Cold War surveys poster design from the late 1940s when the ‘Iron Curtain’ was drawn across Europe to the collapse of communism in the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. Featuring over seventy designs by some of the leading artists and graphic designers of the period including Pablo Picasso, Grapus Design Collective and Peter Kennard, posters have been selected from twenty countries to demonstrate the wide international reach of the conflict. Really looking forward to this exhibition, which runs from 25 September 2008 to 11 January 2009. V&A

What the F**K is Social Media?

Short, sweet and succinct explanation of Social Media.



Wednesday 10 September 2008

Electronic Ink

Men's magazine Esquire is celebrating its 75th anniversary in the US with a limited-edition run of 100,000 copies featuring covers using Electronic Ink technology. The technology works by printing ink containing charged microcapsules, onto a sheet of plastic film that is laminated to a layer of circuitry. The circuitry forms a pattern of pixels that can then be controlled by a display driver - powered by a tiny battery. Esquire's 75th Anniversary E-Ink cover took more than a year to develop. 100,000 lucky customers will find an animated panel on their copies of Esquire, displaying flashing text and images, along with an enhanced Ford Flex advert on the inside cover. Watch the video: Esquire . http://www.esquire.com/the-side/video/e-ink-cover-video?click=pp

Tuesday 9 September 2008

Crystal Ball

Well it seems like Autumn is prematurely here, and mentally it feels like the last quarter of 2008 has definitely started. While we have been continuously busy over July and August, there is a distinct change of pace in the last week – with clients getting focussed on the run up to Christmas and the laid-back August feeling starting to seem like a distant memory. As we go into the last stretch of the year, I’ve been thinking about 2008 so far. Without doubt it has been a bit of a bumpy ride – definitely a game of two halves to use a well-worn football pun. The start to the year was very quiet, and with reports of the credit crunch and impending economic doom doing little to make us feel better, we went into the Summer with a certain amount of uncertainty. But the second half of the year has picked up brilliantly for us. We’ve been doing some amazing things, particularly some great, very visible large format work and are still working with CDP in the run up to the Global launch of their report on 22 September in New York. So thinking about the next 4 months of 2008 – what twists and turns and surprises lay in store for Lavish? It’s hard to know in the current market, but I am convinced the biting credit crunch will continue to put marketing and brand budgets under stress. Clients will be looking to smaller agencies, with lean, agile teams and cross discipline expertise to help them maximise their budgets. I think the model of smaller and mid sized agencies sharing resources and skills will grow, as they look to be ever more effective for clients. And new business and marketing effort is more important than ever to keep in front of people when they are making tough decisions about what marketing activity to do. Only time will tell if my ‘predictions’ will come true. But I do know that Lavish are positioned better than ever before to benefit from this changing market.

How to do just about anything

It's been a bit quiet on the blog front while we've had a busy few weeks. More of that later. In the meantime, I found this great site, which has 'How to' videos on just about everything. Video Jug

Saturday 16 August 2008

Amazing projections and immersive environments

My attention was recently drawn to an amazing US based multi media design lab, through an article in Fast Company. Obscura Digital, who create their experiential marketing magic out of a 30,000 warehouse in San Francisco, have developed their own proprietary software, which literally turns any surface into a stunning high resolution video display. This means that they can create large-scale immersive environments, holographic projects, laser graffiti and motion triggered billboards - just for starters. Think Star Trek holodeck and you’re getting there. For the launch of iGoogle, Obscura turned the whole of New York’s meatpacking district into a massive outdoor art gallery for 3 nights. Over 70 artists participated in this cutting edge marketing campaign and the results were show stopping. Obscura also created amazing viewer activated and interactive displays for the launch of CS3, one of Adobe’s biggest ever product launches. I definitely recommend taking a look at the work on their site, and watch out for these guys, I think we’ll see more Obscura work - in the most unlikeliest of places! Obscura

Friday 15 August 2008

Headshift Summer Party

Having been chained to the office for the past few weeks and weekends, last night we had some well needed social time at the Headshift Summer Party. I have been working with Headshift for a couple of months, and in that time they have moved into funky new offices in Shad Thames. Headshift is Europe's leading enterprise social computing consultancy. They are expert in designing, implementing and growing next generation social software solutions. We spent a very pleasant evening on the roof terrace chatting to various 'Headshifters' and Stuart and Tim from Made by Many. And the top bonus was - it didn't rain!

Wednesday 13 August 2008

Free tool for DIY font design

There may be thousands of fonts available online, but for truly dedicated members of Generation C — who live to create their own, fresh content, that's sometimes not enough. Luckily, help is now at hand in the form of a do-it-yourself font-building tool from digital type retailer FontShop. FontStruc is a free, online tool that lets users quickly and easily create fonts by arranging geometrical shapes in a grid pattern, much like tiles or bricks. Working one letter at a time, users add and remove shapes including blocks and dots to achieve a look they like. Once they're done building, FontStruct generates high-quality TrueType fonts, ready to use in any Mac or Windows application. Users can keep their "FontStructions" private, or they can share them with the FontStruct community for discussion, rating and downloading. They can also display them on other websites or blogs through the FontStruct widget. Several Creative Commons license options are available to allow varying degrees of sharing. Fontstruct Source: Springwise.com

Friday 8 August 2008

Inhale the web

I am enjoying using Addict-o-Matic. As the blurb on the site says: Addict-o-Matic searches the best live sites on the web for the latest news, blog posts, videos and images. It's the perfect tool to keep up with the hottest topics, perform ego searches and feed your addiction for what's up, what's now or what other people are feeding on. Try it. It's cool Addict-o-Matic

New recruits to Team Lavish

We are so happy to announce that we've added some new top-talent to the Lavish team in the past week or so. We are really looking forward to working again with Tim, who is a senior digital creative. A skilled digital designer, motion graphics design/artist and audio/visual specialist - there's not much digital work that Tim hasn't done. Clementine joins us permanently on 1 September, having freelanced with us for the past year. Clem graduated from Central St Martins with a degree in graphic design. Since studying she has worked freelance on design and illustration commissions for a varied client base and her work has featured in branding, on advertising campaigns, wallpaper and product lines, book jackets and set designs. And Allan, our 3D and Photoshop guru is now based in-house with us at Smokehouse Yard. I think we might be looking for new offices in the very near future.....

Photoshop disasters

Nothing amuses us more in the Lavish Lounge than seeing really bad retouching, artwork or image work out there in the commercial world. Seems we are not the only ones who snigger at this type of thing. Check out Photoshop Disasters. There are some top cock-ups in April - especially the Prince Caspian on the side of the bus. What was that about reading the artwork spec....?

Sunday 3 August 2008

Project Management tools take the strain

I subscribe to Computer Arts Magazine, which I generally enjoy reading. Although a lot of the articles tell us stuff we already know, it is still a good read, and often has some quite inspiring design articles. However, this month, they ran an article called ‘Project Management tools take the strain’. As a project manager in the creative industry for over 15 years I turned with great interest to this article. Boy, was I disappointed. Apparently creative project management has 4 ingredients: - A Gantt chart to keep an overview of demands and deadlines - File naming protocol - Systems for client communication - A system to keep track of outstanding bills and invoicing – to make sure that ‘money turns up when you need it’ This is a massively simplified view of the skills required by a top-flight creative project manager. Yes, project managers utilise programmes to help them run projects – from MS Project, MS Excel, Base Camp and many other tools – but the article missed the most important ‘ingredients’ for a creative project manager. That is, it is not about the software you use, but about what you bring to a project. A good project manager has experience, initiative and insight. No computer programme in the world will make up for a bad project manager; who cannot plot a critical path on the ‘back of a fag packet’, who cannot identify and mitigate against project risks, who cannot talk intelligently and knowledgeably about project planning and who cannot work out a project budget or P+L without the aid of a calculator or sophisticated programme to ‘make sure money turns up when you need it’.

Friday 1 August 2008

Business Guys on Business Trips

Fantastically funny site. No need to say anymore than that, but if you work in the creative industry you'll recognise plenty of these characters! Business Guys on Business Trips

Thursday 31 July 2008

Web development partners needed

We are currently looking to boost our network of web developers. We are actively looking for web development partners, to work with us on varied client briefs. We are looking for: Front end / CSS specialists Freelance IA professionals CMS developers Application developers Development / Technical consultants We are not looking to employ these resources, we are looking for individuals or small companies that we can build ongoing working relationships with.

Monday 28 July 2008

Congratulations


So another Tour de France is over.

That wonderful spectacle of team effort, amazing endurance and gladiatorial spirit has once again come to and end. Of course, The Tour has had its scandals this year, but our congratulations must go to Spaniard Carlos Sastre, who won yesterday in Paris.

Vive Le Tour!

Carbon Disclosure Project

We are very proud to announce that we are working with The Carbon Disclosure Project to produce their 2008 annual reports. Lavish are currently working on the production of 3 reports, due for publication in September of this year. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) is an independent not-for-profit organisation aiming to create a lasting relationship between shareholders and corporations regarding the implications for shareholder value and commercial operations presented by climate change. Its goal is to facilitate a dialogue, supported by quality information, from which a rational response to climate change will emerge. Lavish is proud to be supporting CDP in this vital work in the area of climate change. Carbon Disclosure Project

Friday 25 July 2008

Design and the Elastic Mind

I love this online exhibition site for MoMA’s ‘Design and the Elastic Mind’. The exhibition itself highlights designers’ ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and history—changes that demand or reflect major adjustments in human behaviour—and translate them into objects that people can actually understand and use. This website has over three hundred of these works, including fifty projects that are not featured in the gallery exhibition. The navigation takes a bit of getting used to, but it does feel like an exhibition after you’ve used it for a bit. I haven’t yet picked my favourite, but there are plenty to choose from. Design and the Elastic Mind

Thursday 24 July 2008

Flash website for London agency


We have just completed a new website for design and communications agency Metier.

Not exactly ground-breaking stuff, but nicely designed and effective anyway. We like it.

As well as being Metier's digital partner, we also provide print-production and project management consultancy services to them. That's why we appear on the 'Who we are' page. Metier have an impressive roster of clients in the petrochemicals and property sectors.

Metier

Wednesday 23 July 2008

Train in Vain

The past 12 months have heralded my long-overdue introduction to the world of proper grown-up commuting. For the last 7 years I have lived a sum total of 1.25 miles from my place of work, and had the luxury of the fact that I could either walk to work to take a cab (which invariably happened much more often that the walking).

So, as a novice to this commuting thing, I am still stunned by some of the things I encounter on the journey. Some questions I have often asked myself:

Why do people feel the need to eat the equivalent of a medium sized meal on the way home? Do these people have no kitchens, or is the lure of Burger King simply so great it can’t be ignored?

Why is the woman sitting next to me picking bits of skin off the side of her fingernails with her teeth like a woman possessed, and then spitting them out into the aisle? (I think I might have to move…oh my God she’s now picking her head.)

How interested are we in the social arrangements of the girl 7 seats away, who has so far covered every banal subject you can imagine, from what she is wearing on Saturday night to what she had for lunch today?

I could rant on….but also, I have seen some really heart-warming things. Like the whole carriage that have a train party every Christmas, and invited us newbies to come along. They even printed tickets and organised food. Or the set of 4 girls who meet every morning and chat like old friends, even though their only contact is the journey to work. And the very pleasant chat I had this evening with a fellow commuter to distract me from the amazing skin picking woman next to me.

So all in all, it’s still proving to be quite an experience this commuting lark. One thing it is good for is an extra hour’s work each way….or is that a bad thing? Time will tell....

Sunday 20 July 2008

Past Masters on Motorbikes

Lavish are currently designing a small website for a friend of ours, Spencer Reeves, who is competing as a rookie in this year's Yamaha Past Masters Racing Cup (YPMRC). Billed as 'Competing on a budget - Racing to the limit' we got to see some motorbike racing action first-hand this weekend.

The boys were at Brands Hatch for the 13th and 14th rounds of the season, and unfortunately Saturday turned out to be unlucky 13 for Spencer. A blown up engine during Friday's practice session meant a hasty engine-change and a distinct lack of power when it came to race speed. That, combined with an unscheduled trip over the grass on the first race saw a 19th place finish. Unfortunately he didn't fare much better during race two, again losing speed on the straights, despite being quick through the corners.

Aside from technical troubles, we had a great day on Saturday, and were very proud to see our lovely logo loud and proud on the bike.

Spencer is scheduled for some coverage in Metro newspaper, so more when that appears. The website will be finished this week, but check out progress so far:

Spencer Reeves

Friday 18 July 2008

Interesting and Influential bloggers


I have been following the trials, tales and tribulations of my friend Alex, as she goes walkabout through South East Asia on her way to Australia, via her blog
Alex's Great Escape.

Although I don't really know Alex that well as we only met shortly before she left London, through reading her entertaining snapshots of life on the road I've certainly got much more of a sense of her as a person. Writing a diary or a blog can be so personal I wonder how long it would have taken us as friends getting to know eachother for me to have got such a deep insight into her thoughts and feelings?

And it seems that blogging is definitely no longer a boys sport. NorthxEast's list of the world's most influential female bloggers makes interesting reading. A really varied selection of some smart and sassy blogs that I would definitely recommend you bookmark.

Most influential female bloggers

Wednesday 9 July 2008

First press coverage


Metrotwin got its first bit of press coverage today, in Marketing Week. I am sure this is just the start of things to come:

Marketing Week Metrotwin article

Friday 4 July 2008

Metrotwin


For the past 5 weeks or so I have been working on the launch of a new community based website for a client, and after a lot of hard work from a very talented and visionary cross-agency team we went live yesterday with a private beta.

Metrotwin brings the world’s two greatest cities together in one space: an online community for people to share recommendations of the best places to go in New York and London.

There are hundreds of sites providing reviews, but where Metrotwin differs is that we are only interested in the ten best places to do things. So for instance, the ten best places to drink coffee, eat cupcakes or take a client to lunch. Recommendations can also be sub-location based – so within London you can find the coolest places in Clerkenwell or wherever. Every recommendation has a Metrotwin rating (a number out of 100) that updates as you use the site based on the number of times it’s viewed, commented, rated and saved.

While we are in the private beta phase participation is by invitation only, but within the next month or so the site will be open to the public and out there on the t’internet.

Become a fan of Metrotwin on Facebook. Just search ‘Metrotwin’ and join up. Or visit the ‘request an invitation page’ and put your name down to join the most exclusive, ‘in the know’ club in NyLon.

Enjoy:

Metrotwin

Thursday 3 July 2008

Ideas for entrepreneurs

One of my favourite websites at the moment is Springwise. Positioned as ‘new business ideas for entrepreneurial minds’, Springwise uses its network of 8,000 Springspotters in over 70 countries worldwide to showcase the best ideas from around the globe. Springwise scans the globe for the most promising business ventures, ideas and concepts that are ready for regional or international adaptation, expansion, partnering, investments or cooperation. Current ideas include a Dance-Powered Eco Nightclub, innovative new street advertising and a US-based nightlife mapping tool that uses GPS to reveal hotspots. Take a look at some of the weird, wild and sometimes brilliant ideas at Springwise

Friday 27 June 2008

What are we working on?

I never fail to be surprised at the sheer diversity of projects we work on in any one month. Offering the full creative services spectrum means our talented team never know what could be coming in next. This month it all seems to have been digital. We have been doing a lot of video editing work for a museum website, finishing building a Flash website for an agency, providing project management consultancy on a social networking site build, building some data capture functionality for a charity, and pitching for a new website project. It’s funny – some month’s it’s all print work, but at the moment the focus has been online. As well as this variety of projects, we have also been working hard on our Big Stories campaign, which is starting to reap rewards. The offer seems to be being very well received by our target charities, and we’ve had some nice compliments about the microsite and DM pack. Hopefully we can convert this into some new clients and make some new Lavish friends in the coming months.

Persuasion


I’m reading a good book at the moment. ‘Persuasion – The art of influencing people’.

There are some interesting facts around the importance of body language and non-verbal communication. In the 1960’s, Dr Albert Mehrabian conducted a research study that concluded that the impact of a message could be classified as 55% visual, 38% vocal and 7% verbal. Meaning that our body language and tone of voice are infinitely more important than our actual words, in day-to-day communication.

It is interesting in this day and age, when so many of our relationships, friendships and business communications are conducted over text, email, IM, Facebook, Twitter etc how much we are losing in the message, by not focussing on the delivery. If 93% of the impact of our message is based on what you see and how it sounds, our listeners are only actually focussing 7% on what we are actually saying.

So even with all the technology available to us today, it shows that a bit of good-old fashioned ‘face-time’ can’t be beaten.


Persuasion is by James Borg and published by Pearson.

Wednesday 11 June 2008

Who would win in a fight?


So, as a bit of light relief we have started a regular debate with our favourite bar staff at St John.

The 'Who Would Win in a Fight' debate started like this:

Who would win in a fight between a duck-sized horse against one hundred horse-sized ducks?'

We got a variety of answers - but the common consensus was that the duck-sized horse would win. Reasons given included 'enormous webbed feet that would squash the horses' - right through to 'ducks are evil'.

This week's animal-based fight conundrum is:

'Who would win in a fight between one human-sized ant against one hundred ant-sized humans?"

Early indications are in favour of the ant-sized humans... based mostly on the concept of conscious thought and our ability to invent weapons of mass-animal destruction.

Although Madge is valiantly fighting the corner of the human-sized ant - but only on the basis that he/she/it could run faster than the time it would take the hundred ant-sized humans to invent anything...

Your comments / thoughts / ramblings are welcome...

Challenging Times

As we approach the middle of 2008, the challenges facing charities and not-for-profit organisations continue to grow. The global credit crunch is adding even further to the problems of fundraising in a society where donation fatigue is a common problem and disposable income is at a 15 year low. For all charities and not-for-profit organisations, maximising marketing budgets during these times is top priority. This still needs to be married up with producing inspiring, creative work and marketing campaigns that deliver fundraising results, be it acquisition of new donors or retention of existing ones. We have recently put together a marketing campagin aimed at this issue. At Lavish we have many years of experience of delivering cost effective, budget-driven creative projects to audiences in both the corporate and charitable sectors. Our charity clients include: Crisis, Public Concern at Work and The Carbon Disclosure Project. Our 'Big Stories' campaign was launched last week with a DM piece and supporting microsite, and initial responses have been very encouraging. We are following up with calls and currently arranging appointments. We are approaching 75 hand-picked charities in the London and surrounding areas, and are looking forward to talking to them more about how we might be able to help. Take a look at our microsite: www.bigstories.co.uk

Tuesday 10 June 2008

Mac OS X Snow Leopard


Apple today previewed Mac OS X Snow Leopard, the next major version of their operating system. Rather that rather than focusing primarily on new features, Snow Leopard will enhance the performance of OS X, set a new standard for quality and lay the foundation for future OS X innovation.

Snow Leopard is optimised for multi-core processors, taps into the vast computing power of graphic processing units (GPUs), enables breakthrough amounts of RAM and features a new, modern media platform with QuickTime X. Snow Leopard includes out-of-the-box support for Microsoft Exchange 2007 and is scheduled to ship in about a year.

Read more at: Digital Arts

For more information see Apple

Tea


Like most offices around the country, who makes the tea, and when, is a hot topic in our studio!

More anal than most we have even created a tea style guide, which gives pantone references for all of our tea choices and is stuck on the wall! No-one can say we don't take our tea making (or colour management) seriously!

I came across this innovative way to take the pain out of the tea rota:

Make The Tea

Friday 28 March 2008

Loss











On Easter Sunday we found out that the wonderfully talented tattooist Jason Saga had passed away. I didn’t know Jason that well myself, but Madge has been seeing Jason for over two years, and proudly wears two beautiful and vibrant Japanese half-sleeves created by him. Your relationship with your tattoo artist is a very special one, as it is essential you build a connection. They were just starting to plan a large Hanya back piece, and I can remember Madge coming back from his appointment and telling me how excited and keen Jason was to start working on it.

Hearing about Jason’s sad and untimely death has left a shadow over our week, and only now has the sense of shock and disbelief begun to lift a little. Our hearts go out to all of the people who knew and loved Jason and everybody who’s life he touched. His legacy lives on with every person that carries his ink.

Stacey

View some of Jason’s amazing work at Saga Tattoo

Monday 17 March 2008

Cobblers children

So the quote is not original. We’ve all heard the one about the cobbler being too busy working to make new shoes for his children. Well I find internal projects are our version of the poor old shoemaker’s time management issue. We always seem to have a full ‘to-do’ list of marketing materials to create and internal projects to finish. Blogs to write (yes, more than once every 8 weeks), showreels to compile, animations to finish and tailored campaigns to our target sectors are only a few of the things that never seem to get crossed off the list. Every small to medium business owner I speak to suffers from the same problem, and there are plenty of surveys and management training books that seem to back up the feeling that there are not enough hours in the day. The only trouble is, if you don’t keep up to speed with your own marketing activity then new business leads can suffer and before you know it you’re playing catch up. So this month we’ve worked hard. Our Head of Business Development started on 1 March, which has given us a fresh impetus. By the end of the month we will have finished our new CGI showreel, launched a targeted offline and online campaign for the not-for-profit sector, and refocused our sales and marketing activity for the rest of 2008. And we will be posting our blogs more often…watch this space.

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Time to start the Creative Services Blog for real

Hello all, or possibly no one for now. I think the time has come for me to finally start to write down what we do here at Lavish. There are many of you who blog regularly and I want to be out there with you. I want to share from day to day, or possibly week to week, our trials and tribulations. Our problems and successes. I also want to get technical from time to time, posting screengrabs and asking questions of our readers when or if we get stuck on something. Basically “Information Sharing” is the name of the game. There are many of us working in the field of Creative Services and I think it would be interesting to hear your thoughts on our posts. I’m told they call it “Communication” or even “Networking”. From now onwards you’ll all be hearing from myself and Stacey on a regular basis. Speak soon. Madge...