#51 Salt & Pepper

51-salt-pepper

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Dad­dy died March 29, 1962, over a half cen­tu­ry ago. I was 10 years old. He was 62.

Now I am 62.

You can imag­ine March 29 this year has been on my mind a lot late­ly. I am healthy, still feel young and strong (until I do some­thing stu­pid at this age), so it’s hard to imag­ine my dad look­ing like such an old man when he passed away at only 62 years old.

But he always looked like an old man to me, and I loved him for it. That’s one rea­son I’ve always respect­ed my elders. You see, my dad was 51 years old when I was born. Already he had salt & pep­per hair, and still a full head of it in the cas­ket. That’s how I’ve always seen and remem­bered him: with this beau­ti­ful, wavy salt & pep­per hair that I want­ed when I grew old. Well, I have it. Mine’s more sol­id gray, but that’s okay. It still reminds me of Dad­dy. (I nev­er called him Dad, always Dad­dy as I was only 10 when he died. So if it sounds sil­ly that I still call him Dad­dy, well that’s okay…it just sounds right to me.)

I could tell you a lot about this man I loved and admired, and I will. But one thing that is absolute­ly fas­ci­nat­ing is that Andrew J. De Simone was born Decem­ber 31, 1899. That’s the last day of the cen­tu­ry before last! Which meant he was always the same exact age as what­ev­er year it was—to the day. That’s why it’s a lit­tle con­fus­ing to com­pre­hend he was 51 when I was born in 1951. And he was 62 when he died in 1962. Read More

#1 Art & Design

#1 Art & Design


#1 Art & Design
Click to view full-​size or download hi-​rez image for gallery-​quality printing and framing.
This is a high-​resolution pdf & may take a few minutes to download.
Find printing tips & framing ideas here.

This is the piece that launched AmperArt: #1 Art & Design.

It was cre­at­ed as a post­card con­cept to show­case my graph­ic design tal­ent — specif­i­cal­ly con­cept, lay­out, let­ter­ing, typog­ra­phy & exe­cu­tion — to agen­cies & mar­ket­ing departments.

AmperArt Issues

I nev­er did com­mence that post­card cam­paign, but did post the first few designs on an ear­ly blog.* After receiv­ing a lot of pos­i­tive com­ments I real­ized there are a lot of amper­sand fans out there (I call them amper­fans) so decid­ed to cre­ate more of these lay­outs, each fea­tur­ing “the amper­sand as fun & fab­u­lous art,” as the slo­gan now pro­fess­es. After more exhuber­ant response, I cre­at­ed a web­site ded­i­cat­ed just to the amper­sand, Amper​Art​.com, vow­ing to cre­ate & release one Amper­Art design per month. I keep all the orig­i­nal art­work safe­ly in a “dig­i­tal vault” so it can be repro­duced at its orig­i­nal size, usu­al­ly 20″ x 30″, should any­one ever ask for a large giclee to hang on their wall, or if I ever get the crazy urge to exhib­it the Amper­Art col­lec­tion in a gallery. For now, though, each cre­ation is for­mat­ted into an 11″ x 17″ poster, issued free with each release. The files are high res­o­lu­tion, suit­able for gallery-​quality print­ing. Here are some print­ing & fram­ing ideas.

Concept for #1 Art & Design

The idea behind #1 Art & Design is to rep­re­sent the fun­da­men­tal shapes & col­ors in art: “art” is spelled with cir­cles, tri­an­gles & squares (actu­al­ly a cropped rec­tan­gle and a 4‑sided trape­zoid for added inter­est). The col­ors are pri­maries and sec­on­daries, with neu­trals for the type and back­ground. The word “design” is sim­ply what I do best in the world of design: set type. I chose Hel­veti­ca, as it is not only been the most com­mon sans-​serif fam­i­ly for decades, it is tru­ly beau­ti­ful in its sim­plic­i­ty and mod­ern struc­ture, espe­cial­ly in the hands of a pro­fes­sion­al typog­ra­ph­er (no exam­ple of that here except in darn good kern­ing). Com­ple­ment­ing Hel­veti­ca is anoth­er mod­ern type­style of the serif vari­ety, Cen­tu­ry School­book. Why are the shapes not giv­en a dimen­sion­al shad­ow effect (which would seem to be a giv­en)? Because the amper­sand is the star of the show!

AmperArt: shorten that name

Amper­Art start­ed as “Ordi­nary Phras­es & Amper­sands Extra­or­di­naire” — in short, com­mon phras­es with an amper­sand in the mid­dle. That will be the for­mat I fol­low for my month­ly series, to be ren­dered & issued until I can no longer push a pen­cil or paint a pix­el. Kind of a long url, don’t you think? So I came up with Amper­Art. (AmpArt is short­er and cool­er but it sounds like an inked up sound sys­tem; plus I think it was taken.)

I have also cre­at­ed a few oth­er pieces which are not phras­es, such as Amper­ma­tions (shown here). Even­tu­al­ly I may design a line of greet­ing cards (fea­tur­ing the amper­sand, of course), appar­el (prob­a­bly just T‑shirts), jew­el­ry, & cre­ate objets d’ amper­art for sale on the web­site & per­haps in gift shops. I’d like to pro­mote oth­er artists & design­ers, too — as long as their work con­tains an ampersand.

But for now, Amper­Art is just a free month­ly dose of “the amper­sand as fun & fab­u­lous art.” I hope you res­onate with one of these pieces every so often, whether in top­ic, style, col­or, or sto­ry. Or maybe you’ll enjoy every sin­gle one, sim­ply because you’re a fun & fab­u­lous “amper­fan.”

*Art & Design is not my actu­al first con­cept lead­ing up to Amper­Art; that was Sun­ny & Hot, pub­lished June 23, 2011 on my per­son­al blog (defunct) before I turned the con­cept of “fea­tur­ing the amper­sand as fun & fab­u­lous art” into a series. It was fol­lowed by Black & White (the basis of most visu­al ideas), then Red White & Blue (for Inde­pen­dence Day). Art & Design was then cre­at­ed as a “title piece” to intro­duce the new ongo­ing project called Amper­Art & its web­site, Amper​Art​.com. I renum­bered the first sev­er­al works for logis­tics rea­sons. Art & Design was actu­al­ly the third or fourth design I cre­at­ed in the series. My first cre­ation, Sun­ny & Hot, was inspired by a very hot day in the begin­ning of sum­mer way back in 2011. It is assigned #6 in the series.


National Ampersand Day

NationalAmpersandDayLOGO

After sub­mit­ting a request to Nation​al​Day​Cal​en​dar​.com, I am proud to announce Amper­sand Day is offi­cial. At my sug­ges­tion, it is observed on Sep­tem­ber 8 of each year. I chose that date because most of the let­ters & the numer­al 8 can be twist­ed (with a bit of cre­ative license) into an amper­sand. Here’s a list of ideas how you can cel­e­brate Nation­al Amper­sand Day. Let me know if you can think of others.


chaz sez ...

I think I’ll have to send out those Amper­Art post­cards as orig­i­nal­ly intend­ed, to mar­ket my tal­ent to the agen­cies and cor­po­ra­tions which rec­og­nize and hire the work of a pro­fes­sion­al design­er. Late­ly I’ve been find­ing it more dif­fi­cult to find work over the Inter­net, com­pet­ing with crap agen­cies such as Elance and Upwork, who attract bargain-​basement clients and ama­teur “design­ers.”

The com­put­er is a boon in the cre­ative realm: no more inky logos; no more wait­ing for velox­es and stats; the abil­i­ty to kern my own typog­ra­phy; direct-​to-​press effi­cien­cy; and free, instan­ta­neous deliv­ery of art­work over the Inter­net instead of expen­sive couri­er services.

On the oth­er hand, where it seemed mag­i­cal to cater to clients half way around the world in real time (even if it meant set­ting the alarm clock for 3 a.m.) the Inter­net is now invit­ing com­pe­ti­tion from third-​world coun­tries. I am now com­pet­ing with “design­ers” whose work is sub-​par and whose rates are as low as $1 per hour. No exag­ger­a­tion. The worst part is that the clients that hire these ama­teurs don’t know any dif­fer­ence; the price is so attrac­tive they don’t real­ize it’s hurt­ing their brand’s image and credibility.

Most of my pro­pos­al writ­ing these days is spent demon­strat­ing the dif­fer­ence between mediocre and accept­able design (let alone stel­lar design) and try­ing to con­vey the val­ue of per­ceived qual­i­ty, whether on a con­cious or sub­con­cious lev­el. Here’s a com­pi­la­tion of hor­ren­dous logos pro­duced by one of the “pro­fes­sion­al design firms” on these online “cre­ative” agencies.

Off to buy some post­card stamps…


Production notes for #1 Art & Design:
Original size: 20x30 inches
Program: Adobe Photoshop
Fonts: Helvetica, Century Schoolbook
Ampersand: Century Schoolbook

For pro­fes­sion­al graph­ic design, please vis­it Des­i­mone Design.

Desimone? Damn good!