ap

by epsilon • Uploaded: Apr. 23 '10

1180c35970f16ff5ee156342ad376a26.png

Add to Pad (In 3 Pad s )

Description: Just playing with some organic shapes...
Status: Nothing set
Viewed: 3546
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Lets Discuss

rudy hurtado Apr. 23 '10

It looks interesting, it caught my eye for sure even in the small thumbnail.

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mcdseven Apr. 23 '10

yes this is interesting.

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jonnyd Apr. 23 '10

Intresting. ap type needs some options!

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epsilon Apr. 23 '10

Thanks, fellas. I'm going to letterpress this baby next week, see how it comes out.

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epsilon Apr. 27 '10

Updated. Rearranged blotches for a bit rounder overall shape.

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logomotive Apr. 27 '10

forgot to mention, I like this and think it will be great letterpressed.

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logoboom Apr. 27 '10

I think it would look even better in thermography.

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raja Apr. 28 '10

hey eps, you said you post here in hopes of someone pointing out similar designs, are you looking for that now?

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epsilon Apr. 28 '10

Sure thing, bring it on.

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raja Apr. 29 '10

nothing confrontational...**but there is a paintball company here (Toronto area) that I drive by sometimes whose logo looks almost identical to the untrained eye...no cause for alarm since you are just playing around. also the name eludes me right now or I would have googled it**This would look awesome letterpressed btw

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logoboom Apr. 29 '10

or black matte foil

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epsilon Apr. 29 '10

%5E More like thermographic offset engraving :)**@raja - Oh, %3Ca style%3D%22text-decoration:underline%3B%22 href%3Dhttp://images.google.ca/images?q%3Dnickelodeon logo%3Ethis one%3C/a%3E? **I should've mentioned that this is just a doodle to go on a back of my card, not a logo or a personal brand. Something to take a better advantage of the letterpress process and get some nice textural effect out of it. **Started with a square, like in the avatar, then rounded the corners, then rounded them more, got a boring circle, added wobble to the edge, then added more wobble - still looked too rigid and geometrical - then eroded the wobble and arrived at this. So this is meant to be more of an erosion effect rather than a splatter.**

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epsilon May. 05 '10

Got the cards. Not exactly how I wanted them... in fact, quite a bit off in terms of actual appearance vs. the original design, but here's a photo anyway -**%22http://www.flickr.com/photos/37230902@N04/4582780102/%22:http://www.flickr.com/photos/37230902@N04/4582780102 %26nbsp%3B %26nbsp%3B %3C%3D clicky-click**See how the font appears to have lighter weight than on the logo image? That's the problem. The impression area flowed over its boundaries and carried the ink with it.

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michaelspitz May. 05 '10

%5EStill, pretty sweet looking in any case... %3B) Can't beat tactile production...

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logomotive May. 05 '10

I think it looks good. In fact it almost fits the organic shape better than this one.

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raja May. 05 '10

%5E agree with the mikes

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logoboom May. 05 '10

So the emboss reads backwards on the front of the card?

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Ocularink May. 05 '10

%5E Having worked with letterpress before I'm assuming the card is double ply ( for lack of a better term ) and the embossing doesn't show on the opposite side. Regarding the visual weight of the type, you usually have to bump up the type to compensate. Embossing has a way of making it look thinner than it actually is. Regardless, looks nice dude!

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epsilon May. 05 '10

Actually, no, Kev, it's not duplexed. It's a single ply with a shallow impression, so it creates virtually no show through on even this relatively thin stock (160%23). **From what I gather it requires certain skill to letterpress this way, and that's the reason why so many letterpress shops strongly recommend to use thick stock (of 220%23 and up) when a show through is not desired.**This part they did really great. What didn't quite work out is %22this%22:http://swapped.cc/tmp/letterpress.jpg (click on 'this').

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epsilon May. 05 '10

Glen, that's not an emboss. Emboss is when the force is applied to the back to make the front pop. And with the letterpress the force is applied to the front to make an impression on the front itself, and this may or may not create a show-through on the back.

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Hayes Image May. 05 '10

That's letterpress for you :) When I worked at a letterpress printer's whilst I was at design school...(memories) I was always instructed to tell designers to losen their kerning 5 - 15pt more than they normally would, to compensate for the impression.

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Ocularink May. 06 '10

Thanks for the info guys.

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mabu Jun. 16 '10

Wonderful. The letterpress turned out great too, Alex.

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