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Rolling Rook Studio - Showcased on Pantone® & Adobe Websites
We're proud to announce that Rolling Rook Studio's "Dia De Los Muertos" project was showcased this month in the features section of the Pantone® Canvas website. This showcase also earned our work the honor of being featured on Adobe's Behance portfolio site.
The $5 Logo
Anyone considering the cheap route for design work, should really read this article to see what they're getting into. (And yes, we're confident enough to refer you to a website run by potential competition.)
Portraits - The IT Crowd
Ok, I'll admit. I'm a geek and I absolutely loved the British TV series "IT Crowd". So today I did portraits of the main characters from the IT department, Richard Ayoade and Chris O'Dowd.
Catskill Country Store (An Unintentional Photo Shoot)
While visiting Catskill, NY over the weekend, I came upon the lovely Catskill Country Store, full of local produce, cheeses, coffee and bread. Carol Wilkinson, the proprietor, caught me shooting photographs and inquired about my hobby. I showed her a few that I had just snapped and she was absolutely delighted, so I ended up shooting her shop for her so that she could have photos to use.











Poster Makes it into Papergirl Vancouver Show!
With all the entries for Papergirl Vancouver, I never would have thought that my entry would have made it into the actual show and hang in the gallery. I'm honored and excited to see my poster hanging in the Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre, in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Poster on the right, hanging on the line in the gallery on the left.
Photograph from Papergirl Vancouver
Poster created by Rolling Rook Studio for Papergirl Vancouver 2014
Getting Greener
Things are getting just a tad greener around the studio! We recently had Circle City Rain Barrels install this lovely new rain barrel so that we can water our plants and herb garden with rain water instead of tap water.
Papergirl Vancouver 2014
I got a notification from one of the bicycle lists that I'm on about "Papergirl Vancouver 2014". It looked like such a cool project I thought I'd send something of mine their way, so I'm having a few copies of the following poster printed (without words on it) and will shipping one of them off to Vancouver as soon as I get them.
Poster for Papergirl Vancouver (right) size 11.25" x 17.3"
But, have you ever done a logo for a flea circus?
Clients will sometimes ask for examples of work that you, or your studio, has done for other clients that are in the same business or similar industry. As a designer, this often throws me for a loop. Especially if it is something we've never done before. Sometimes I even find it a little daunting, as if somehow we're not worthy.
The first logo I ever designed, which is still in service to this day was an ark with a rainbow over it for a company called Apartment Relocation Konsultants. That was in 1987 and I've been designing in some capacity or another ever since.
Back in 1987, we didn't have Adobe software, or even computers for that matter. Logos were hand drawn (in black) and then photographed for printing. No one asked me if I'd ever done a logo for an apartment relocation service or any logo at all, for that matter (SCHWEW!). Back then, I was a creative young artist, about to go to college with dreams of learning to paint like the masters and becoming famous someday. We didn't have the internet, websites, or email. Clients were met in person, in your neighborhood, on the street, in hotels, bars, door-to-door, word of mouth, over the telephone, etc. We weren't anonymous entities floating in the aether, you actually had to get to know people and schmooze your way in. Today, everything has changed.
Today I have clients whom I have never seen or even spoken to. We work their designs out via email, Creative Cloud, and DropBox then exchange payments via PayPal. We know nothing of each other, and no one seems to care. We get it done and move on to the next project.
So, I kind of understand, when a potential client reaches out through the aether and requests a quote for their "flea circus", then wants to see examples of all the other "flea circus" logos I've done. (Which, at this time, (in case you hadn't guessed), is an absolute ZERO, by the way.)
At this point, I grow perplexed and think, "Just because I've never done a flea circus logo before doesn't make me any less of a designer or creative. Why do they need to see someone else's logo? Do they need ideas? Should I make up some bogus flea circus logo to win their trust? How do I convince them that I'm the right designer for them? Can I just direct them to other projects I've done and still convince them? Are they the right client for me?"
True, in life, as in art, there is a "first time for everything", but how do you handle that awkward situation and make them realize that just because you've never done a flea circus logo, doesn't mean you can't?
Case in point...