Skip to main content Site map

Problem Solved: A Primer in Design and Communication New edition


Problem Solved: A Primer in Design and Communication New edition

Paperback by Johnson, Michael

Problem Solved: A Primer in Design and Communication

WAS £16.95   SAVE £2.54

£14.41

ISBN:
9780714844534
Publication Date:
17 Sep 2004
Edition/language:
New edition / English
Publisher:
Phaidon Press Ltd
Pages:
288 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 16 - 24 May 2024
Problem Solved: A Primer in Design and Communication

Description

Designers and advertisers continually have to interpret design briefs, produce new solutions to familiar problems and work to keep their clients' brands high in the public consciousness. This highly informative guide brings together for the first time discussions and case studies that illustrate the working methods of major advertising and graphic design firms. Each chapter explores a different theme of problem solving, and concludes with a case study to illustrate a particular solution in detail. Themes include producing innovative work, avoiding repetition, standing out in the market place, reinventing a tired brand, communicating essential facts in a culture of information overload, keeping a brand young and trendy, dealing sensitively with propaganda, the use of shock tactics, and word-based advertising in a world over-run with images and sound-bites. Examples featured are taken from classic and contemporary international advertising. Designers and agencies whose work is discussed in the book include Chermayeff and Geismar, Saatchi and Saatchi, BMP, Minale Tattersfield, Derek Birdsall, Niklaus Troxler, Bob Gill, Wieslaw Walkuski, Makoto Saito, Paul Fishlock and Pentagram.

Contents

Introduction; Chapter 1, Re-invention: The Re-appraise or Die problem; Chapter 2, Smoke and Mirrors: The Astonish Me problem; Chapter 3, Branding: The Soap Powder problem; Chapter 4, Budgets: The Message is the Price problem; Chapter 5, Charities and Institutions: The Charity Begins at Work problem; Chapter 6, Breakthrough: The Paradigm Shift problem; Chapter 7, Humour: The Boo-hoo problem; Chapter 8, Shock: The Nothing Shocks Me problem; Chapter 9, Identity Change: The Evolve or Revolve problem; Chapter 10, Generation Gap: The Cargo Pants in Middle Age problem; Chapter 11, Information: The Information Rejection problem; Chapter 12, Propaganda and Ethics: The Ethical problem; Chapter 13, Education: The Can't Learn, Won't Learn problem; Chapter 14, Heritage and Retro: The Older Can Be Better problem; Chapter 15, Vernacular: The Over-designed problem; Chapter 16, Repetition: The Groundhog Day problem; Chapter 17, Trust: The Fear and Loathing problem; Chapter 18, Words: The Nobody Reads Anymore problem; Bibliography; Index

Back

University of Chester logo