
Stiletto NYC’s contribution to Re:think

As part of the London Design Festival, Wardour Publishing & Design has put together a nice little book/project called Re:think, launched last Thursday in Clerkenwell. Self-proclaimed as ‘a collection of visual trifles designed to amuse and inspire’, Re:think asks contributors to redesign anything they want. The results are beautifully odd (Stiletto NYC‘s designs for new creatures), sometimes predictable (Damien Weighill’s Queen wearing a moustache) and altogether entertaining (Laura Fountain’s hybrid words, including ‘glossip‘, meaning scandalous information or rumour that attracts such high levels of interest that it would be fitting of publication in a glossy magazine). The limited edition book is £3.50, and there’s talk that the project will continue in the form of an online magazine. Interested parties should check them out via the Facebook group here.
As if designing a cover wasn’t complicated enough— Esquire U.S. had to go and wire up their October cover all flashy-like. How Blade Runner.
I’m in two minds about the e-ink technology. I think Chris Snyder’s blog post over at Wired nailed it when he said “The whole cover feels thick, like one of those musical greeting cards your friends really don’t want you to give them anymore. The batteries have a life of about 8 to 9 months, but as a static message there is no ability to re-use, let alone a reason to re-read.”
On the one hand, I think it’s important to embrace new technologies, and certainly to explore options for reducing paper, increasing content etc. But how much of this technology will extend to true editorial content, and how much will go toward elaborated advertising? Considering that the limited run of 100K copies cost news-stand buyers an extra 2 bucks, will we eventually end up paying more for the same content with flashier ads?
Ultimately, we’ll have to wait and see how this technology develops. Like Chris Snyder, I fail to see its benefits in its present state, or even its future updated-remotely-ever-changing-content state, particularly now that we can access web content on our iPhones. If the e-paper technology were to be employed page-for-page, wouldn’t the magazine essentially be a web-site in your hands? And what happens when the batteries run out? Blank Pages? Perhaps I’m being close-minded. I’m still a believer in print. I still believe that magazines are records of our times, who we are, who we were, and who we think we’re going to be. I’d hate for them to become a gadget. I do, however, commend Esquire. I think, for this issue at least, it’s a bold move that illustrates their curiosity. It does represent where we’re at in our digital age, and it’s a nice place to be. But as Editor David Granger points out, “This time it’s cool. This time it’s a novelty”. Until a truly new medium emerges from the e-ink technology, I’m staying CMYK.