Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Thu, Aug 19, 2010
Near the top of my list of "Books I Wish I'd Designed" is Powers of Ten, a collaboration of Philip and Phyllis Morrison with the Office of Charles and Ray Eames. It is as accessible and captivating to children as adults, which was apparently the intention of all of its creators: "The sketch should, Eames decided, appeal to a ten-year-old as well as a physicist; it should contain a ‘gut feeling’ about dimensions in time and space as well as a sound theoretical approach to those dimensions.”
The premise of Powers of Ten is the illustration of the infinitely large and small by locating the reader specifically within the universe. Some have used something similar to describe the Bible, but to my mind Powers of Ten is a lot more reader-friendly.
The concept was taken from a 1950s children's book, Cosmic View: The Universe in Forty Jumps. It was then made into a short (9-minute) film in 1968 that was adapted into this book in 1982. Both the frames of the film and the shape of the books are square. The starting point is a representation of an area that is 10 meters square (100).The image within is an overhead view of a man and woman at a picnic.
Next the view zooms out to an area 100 meters square (10m x 10m, or 101),
then to 1,000 meters, and 10,000, until it represents the size of the observable universe—one billion light years away (1024).
At the center of each square is another blue-ruled square representing the smaller area from the previous image. From a design perspective, these two concentric squares represent the basic components that graphic design involves: composition and proportion. That these two very flat shapes can form the structure for a three-dimensional voyage to infinity always reminds me of the unlimited possibilities offered by a blank page (or screen).
In the film, the viewer must remain a passenger who progresses forward in a linear fashion. In the book, however, the reader can move back and forth through time and space at will—he commands the voyage that unfolds on the right-hand page of each spread. The left-hand pages are four-column grids filled with pictures and text that bring to life each point in the voyage—its structure, texture, atmospheric conditions, and the life forms it supports.

I have always loved illustrated books for offering the opportunity to read, learn, and understand backwards, forwards, sideways, or from the middle out, any way that makes sense to me. If I want, I can even start on the first page and read to the end of the book. Every page of Powers of Ten reminds me why I continue to be fascinated by the practice of graphic design.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Mon, Jun 14, 2010
A great many designers I know have overcome reading disabilities, as I have. Since I was compensating for an eye-tracking problem that went undiagnosed until well into my adult years, reading was a literal strain, which precluded any chance I had of "relaxing with a book." As a result, reading never became integrated as a consistent activity into my life. I've always pushed myself to keep at it and inevitably, when I reach the end of a really good book, I wonder why I don't do more of this.
I expect this is the reason I have always loved illustrated books—children's books, coffee table books, graphic novels—and have spent most of my career designing them. Illustrations give me a break from reading while offering a way to process information in a more immediate fashion. It's also why I consider information graphics (charts, graphs, tables, etc.) to be illustrative. Once finished with my "break," I can return to my place in the text more relaxed and better informed than when I left.

Conversely, these very difficult blogging exercises (a.k.a. expository writing) require me to reason, then write sentences that expand on the previous ones as well as clearly pave the way for those that will be subsequent. I once thought that this was a very modest ambition, but that was before I started writing blogs and especially after I started reading other people's.

Codgers like me often fret that this online world is going to shorten our collective attention span to zero. But, maybe we are in the midst of a fundamental shift in the way people approach and absorb information. I don't know what's going to happen, but I doubt it will turn us all into neanderthals.
To me, a more legitimate concern is the ubiquitous notion that equates content with volume: that is, unconnected, interchangeable pieces meant to fill space rather than inform. The disturbing implication is that content is intended to be ignored rather than understood. Its sole reason for being is to spur one to keep clicking and moving and clicking some more. It is already far too easy to do that online, so what is the advantage to making that one's goal?
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Tue, May 11, 2010
For three weeks now, I've been working on a blog about color correction for digital and print publications. I think I've developed decent skills in this area during my many years of work in graphic design and production, so I thought I could provide some tips readers might appreciate when left to fend for themselves while producing a publication.
I began by wrestling with ways to describe how to attain accurate reproduction of original artworks and display their images consistently across a variety of media. This brought me to consider the astonishing range of displays on which people can presently view the same, single image, and how widely color and contrast is likely to shift with each of those displays. Always developing printing capabilities skew things even further.

Then I considered how millions of people, like me, spend hours in front of computers, being deluged by countless images. When you contend with that kind of visual saturation on a daily basis, the only chance an image has to grab your attention is if there is something really wrong with it. Even then, I expect that such an egregious error would also need to be engaging enough to keep the viewer from scrolling and clicking.
As you can see, color correction had taken a back seat to a consideration of what it presently means to look at art.

On the print side, my company produces catalogs for museum exhibitions and collections as well as other kinds of books that deal with fine art and architecture. We share with our photographers, production managers, prepress techs, and printers the responsibility for controlling consistency and delivering accurate reproduction. While there is much room for error, the variables are manageable, and we all have the common goal of producing an accurate printed page. At every step along the way, we spend a great deal of time comparing and adjusting each piece in order to provide readers with a collection of images with which they will also want to spend time.
Lately, we have been considering how the great shift from print to digital publishing will affect our niche market of fine art publishing, and how best to utilize these new, always evolving technologies. We've met with firms that adapt picture-driven books to e-book format. To date, the most successful of these are instructional titles (e.g., cooking, craft, and DIY books and magazines). But, chances are that the reader who spends time studying specific images or text in such books is doing so to clear up confusion about the subject rather than out of appreciation for the pictures.
I'd really like to know if some people would prefer to study a fine art reproduction on a monitor rather than on the printed page. I expect there are many who do, and no doubt I will find their reasons surprising.
I recently talked with a gallery owner who specializes in contemporary and vintage silver print photographs. We talked about how the tiny, rarified market for fine art photography books continues to shrink. He suggested that the flood of digital images that has become available to everyone, everywhere could cause people to forget the pleasures of viewing photographic prints "in the flesh," which could easily lead to a wholesale loss of interest in attending photography exhibits at galleries or museums. An excessively gloomy forecast, perhaps, but it does cause me to wonder if we are all progressively losing our capacity for sustained visual attention.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Fri, Apr 09, 2010
My March 24th post concerned hiring a design or marketing firm or an advertising agency to develop and produce a book about an organization's history. As I mentioned then, anniversary books are often longer and editorially more complex than the projects typically produced by such firms.

I also noted that the manuscript and art for such an anniversary book might not have received the necessary shaping, trimming, and focusing that a strong editorial hand can supply. So, even if you are confident in your completed manuscript, here are five crucial points to cover before commissioning a creative team.
1. Previous experience Requesting information as specific as possible on this point always works to your advantage. If the potential vendor assures you that there is no difference between the work he has produced and what you require, ask him why — specifically and in detail. You know much more and about your organization and are likely to have a clearer picture of the end product you want than he does. Once, when bidding to produce the history of an executive recruitment firm, we were summarily discounted because we did not have another executive recruitment firm's history in our portfolio. The client spent fifteen very illuminating minutes outlining why they required such particular experience.
2. Communication vs. intimidationDo the prospective firms understand your business, your organization, your story? Do they effectively present to you your story — in terms related to your business — rather than explain how they approach their own work? I've attended design presentations, both as a designer and a client, at which I have seen too many design professionals rely heavily on design-speak. They seemed to use it as an effective means of intimidation, assuming that the best defense is a good offense. Resist these obvious tactics, and keep in mind that the presenter needs to prepare for the meeting by familiarizing himself with your work, not the other way around.
3. Samples of their workIf you want a cloth-bound, hardcover book with a French-fold* dust jacket and five-color, printed endpapers, the firm you hire needs to show you a sample of exactly that. Your vendor should be working with a printer who specializes in printing and binding illustrated, hardbound books. If not, you run a significant risk of cost over-runs, schedule delays, and compromises to the overall quality of the finished book.
4. Schedule, front-end and back end
Does the design firm you are interviewing understand the time frame your anniversary history requires? Imagine you have a total of 14 months in which to complete the project, but your designer doesn't realize it may take more than 12 of those months to complete the text and art research, interviews, writing, and editing. Such inexperience will turn into significant rush fees for production and printing, not to mention the chance of a missed deadline.
5. Will it last? You expect the beautifully printed and bound book you have worked so hard to produce — this volume that commemorates the last however-many years of your organization — to have a shelf life of more than a few months. Many print publications incorporate very expensive techniques and materials, but are not expected to have the long and useful life of a well-made book. Printers and binders specializing in fine-quality illustrated books have the resources to offer the best prices on paper, printing, and binding materials that endure. Find out if the firm you are interviewing knows how to provide you with a beautiful book that will also last decades, not just years. Note, too, that the same kind of longevity should be expected from the book's look, feel and design. Trendy seldom equals lasting.
*A "french fold" dust-jacket is one with folded, double-thick edges along the book's perimeter, which assures greater durability and resistance to tearing.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Wed, Mar 24, 2010

The last thing any organization's harried communications director needs is to go through the complicated process of hiring a design firm/marketing firm/advertising agency to produce their history only to be met with: "We are ready to start, when will you send us the text, art, research, interviews, manuscript, and everything else?"
An annual report, for example, can easily reach book-length proportions. However, it's reasonable to expect that an annual report will begin with an overview of the previous year and end with lists of officers and board members. Moreover, altering the report's form would do little to enhance the content within and is even likely to make it more difficult to use.
A history that includes pictures, while nonfiction, is still a story, and integrating the ways both pictures and text drive that story is integral to creating an engaging illustrated book.
The design of an illustrated history benefits from a close relationship between author, editor, and designer. Even a history as rudimentary as a chronological time-line will do more to engage the reader if each benchmark is carefully considered, reflecting the preceding entry and informing the subsequent.
As an illustrated-book producer, I have had the good fortune to be involved in the "building" of an illustrated book. The editor and I met with the book's two authors and its photographer (who documented the entire project) for a series of weekly brainstorming meetings on how to portray the way architect Frank Gehry's astonishing Stata Center came to be, from concept through design, execution, construction, and implementation.

Each week we would meet and discuss the many issues that needed to be addressed. The following week we returned with our various contributions, such as rough manuscript or rough layouts (sometimes both). These inspired further discussion of how to expand and develop the story.
I've experienced very few projects that have developed as organically as this one. It confirmed my concern that when a designer is handed all the components of a history and told to put them together, he or she could easily miss any number of opportunities to bring the story to life. For example, I have seen countless designers roll their eyes at the art they receive for a project, never considering what they could do to improve both the art and the project overall.

My partner, the editorial "wing" of our company, and I provide our clients with a simple, unique service that seems to be little known outside of the publishing world. When we receive a manuscript, we can furnish the client with an "art manuscript": we simply annotate the text with suggestions for photographs, art, or artifacts that enhance the story's progression. We offer this service whether we are developing a new manuscript with the author, editing a client's completed manuscript, or have received both edited manuscript and art program from a client. Our suggestions are always well received, but never more so than when a client's "photo research staff" is actually an overworked manager who had too much to do before the project landed on her desk. Such circumstances rarely foster inspiration. In fact, our art manuscripts have often inspired researchers to track down illustrations above and beyond our suggestions.
I have never considered the elements of graphic design as a collection of discrete components that need to be balanced and arranged. When words and pictures work side by side, they elevate even the most unlikely subject and bring its story to life. A client need never apologize for bringing what others might consider a "prosaic" topic to the table. Our goal is to reinvigorate the client—and the ultimate reader— to consider a familiar story with their own fresh, excited eyes.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Fri, Mar 05, 2010

I am very fortunate to be able to design and produce wonderful illustrated books on painting, sculpture, photography, decorative arts, and architecture for museums as well as university and commercial publishers. I also take great pleasure in perusing a thoughtfully designed book-with-pictures, appreciating the pacing and rhythm of its layout and how text and art refer to and enhance each other.

In my work I strive to provide the viewer with text that is both easy to read and scan for specific information, as well as presenting pictures that one can scan with ease; taking in its surface or boundaries or finding its compositional (or metaphoric) focus.
Of course, all this suggests my preference for holding a book in my hands, scanning spreads from left to right, and turning pages. This experience may be destined for obsolescence, and at Vern Associates we are cautiously adapting our work to accommodate the insistent shift from print-on-paper to digital books.
One seldom visits a site or reads a blog that doesn't supplement its text with video. This is what most people have come to expect from an interactive medium, and video can convey a great deal of information effectively and persuasively. It is a boon for those looking for information on how to do something, because you can watch someone demonstrate the task. I'm more skeptical of sites that combine text with talking heads who instruct, coach, sell, or what have you.
I recently visited two publishing sites that sell hybrid book-and-video titles and found that they to relate to each other in unexpected ways.
Vook is a web-based application that partners with magazine and book publishers to produce highly interactive digital books that you can access on PCs, digital readers, or mobile phones. These vooks include both text and video, along with links to social media sites. Some titles, such as those about cooking and fitness are a good fit for this format. Fiction titles often include dramatized versions of the story, alongside the text. Another discovery was the children's and Y-A author Patrick Carman's Skeleton Creek series (Scholastic). Carman wrote an interesting piece in Publisher's Weekly about his successful series that gets kids really interested in reading.

These stories are presented as text followed by video and so on. This video carrot works really well in making the written word much less of a stick. In the Skeleton Creek books, kids must finish reading before they get to the movie. I don't think that would fly with customers downloading novels from Vook.
The voices in my head
I've never mentioned this to anyone—nor had reason to, until now—but when I read, I "hear" the words in my own voice. My voice is modulated depending on the topic. It is very nondescript when I am calculating figures in a math text, and can get quite dramatic for fiction, a higher pitch for female characters, an appropriate accent for English or French or Bostonian characters. It seems to me that these sounds become an integral part of how I comprehend the written word, make it part of my memory, and classify its value. More important, my internal voice is my first step to visualizing the images and situation being described. I'd like to think that other people share this experience while reading. If not, they must have other means of processing words and internalizing stories. I don't understand how the same degree of comprehension is possible from watching a scripted, filmed, and edited version of that same story, but would love to know if other people share my opinion.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Tue, Oct 27, 2009
When Vern Associates (VAI) began work as an illustrated-book producer 15 years ago, my partner, an exceptionally skillful and sensitive editor, expressed frustration at working with certain graphic designers who considered “content” just another tool in their design workboxes—“nothing more than gray space,” as one had called it. Many designers seem to have little interest or understanding of the text or subject matter with which they were assigned to work.
As VAI’s creative director, I considered this to be a challenge, and it has set a standard for the publications we produce for our clients. VAI books entice readers to spend time with them. In order to do this, I need to be very familiar with the content—I need to read it. While my understanding of the story may not be as detailed as my partner’s, I make certain I grasp not just the nature of our client’s work, but also what about it excites them.
I have started examining some favorite VAI projects using the journalist’s basic storytelling structure—who, what, when, where, and why—to consider how VAI integrates graphic design in the service of animating their stories. This blog looks at the who and what; part 2 will consider the remaining three Ws.

Who— Living in the Future: International House, 75 Years
When we were called upon to create a commemorative history for the storied international residence that grew up alongside Columbia University in New York City, it became apparent that the foundation of this book would be its people and the vast array of stories they brought from around the world. Complementing these stories was a rainbow of faces that exemplified the principles of International House as eloquently as it’s credo:
I am International House.
I open my doors to the students of the world
that they may live together and grow in understanding.
I am builded as a canopy for an adventure
that had its beginning in a friendly greeting to a lonely student
which has widened into a world of brotherhood.
Therefore, I am not a beginning but a fulfillment.
Faces abound throughout this book. The history of this remarkable place includes some of the twentieth century’s most illustrious figures, and the fascinating formal and candid event photographs that punctuate the text were always displayed alongside portraits and profiles of individuals—some famous, others less so—who have woven the fabric of this international tapestry.

What– Safer, More Secure Lives: A History of Liberty Mutual Group
This particular what represents the broad spectrum of stories, beliefs, goals, and achievements that make an organization stand out from its competitors in the mind of its public. In short, it is the company’s brand.
A corporate brings to life the development of a company’s brand, that is, how it adapted to changes in society and the demands of those it serves in order to grow and flourish.
As we do with all of our clients, we worked closely with Liberty Mutual’s communications and marketing departments, adhering to graphic standards for the brand. For example, in this case we featured the development of Liberty Mutual’s logo, from before the introduction of Lady Liberty through all of her corporate makeovers.

As de facto publisher for our clients, we take pride in creating books that reflect and respect the uniqueness of their brand. But they must also stand apart as fully realized editorial works, not merely advertising or marketing material.
Posted by Peter Blaiwas on Wed, Sep 23, 2009
When we started Vern Associates 15 years ago, almost all of our clients were commercial publishing companies well versed in every aspect of the editorial, design, and production processes required to make a book. As our client base expanded to include nonpublishing entities, however, we were suddenly called upon to explain both the specifics and even some basic concepts of our work.
Initial confusion usually shows itself when I tell a potential client that we produce “illustrated books.” For publishing professionals, this term conjures up different types of publications, each with its own specific market. But our nonpublishing clients often assume we produce picture books for young children. That’s reasonable. Children’s books prominently display “illustrated by” credits on their covers, and illustration tends to suggest drawn or painted artwork.
I researched the term illustrated book and found the following definition in The Illustrated Book: Notes on an Exhibition in the Print Gallery of the New York Public Library, written in 1919 by Frank Weitenkampf:
Books
were illustrated from the beginning. From the block books and the
earliest books printed with movable type, on through four and a half centuries, illustration has played its significant part in the printed book. Two basic principles have obtained: the illustration must either elucidate
the text or adorn it. It may do both; sometimes it does neither.
We produce museum catalogs illustrated with reproductions of fine art; corporate and organizational histories illustrated with photographs, documents, and artifacts; professional publications illustrated with information graphics and photo-documentation; lifestyle books showing photographs or drawings of food, design, etc. Regardless of a book’s category, it requires that its illustration (be it photography, fine or commercial art, even use of color and typographic display) integrate with the text to invite the reader’s attention and sustain it through an extensive and complex story.
Being an art book designer has captured my interest for more than 20 years. I love the challenge of creating visual guides, landmarks, respites, and highlights for readers to use and enjoy on their journey from front cover to back. Each new title presents its own unique set of challenges and, as many poorly designed books confirm, it is very easy to apply illustration in a way that neither elucidates its text nor adorns it.