The Changingman
Paul Weller: fashion designer? Antonia Wilson talks to the ‘Modfather’ about his menswear label Real Stars Are Rare, his love of craft and the relationship between music and fashion
Paul Weller: fashion designer? Antonia Wilson talks to the ‘Modfather’ about his menswear label Real Stars Are Rare, his love of craft and the relationship between music and fashion
Another week, another lovely new ad from Ikea. This latest spot, created for the Asian market, envisions the Ikea catalogue as a cookbook, from which you can cook up a new kitchen, to your desired specifications.
The commute to work is often written off as a dull necessity, but with no distractions it can be the perfect mobile studio
In the 1990s, the Mac made experimenting with layouts a breeze. Today, it’s still where great ideas can take shape
With its all-analogue, no-beauty retouching ethos, PYLOT magazine stands out in the crowded indie mag market. Antonia Wilson talks to editor-in-chief Max Barnett and art director Daniel Clatworthy
Amid allegations of plagiarism, usage of Kenjiro Sano’s recently unveiled emblem for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics has been suspended by the Games’ organising committee, according reports from Japanese broadcaster, NHK
In order to try to cut the number of deaths caused by trains hitting people walking on its tracks, Mumbai’s suburban railway is employing shock tactics in the form of an extraordinary poster
This weekend is the last chance to see our Talentspotting project, in association with Creative Translation, which sees work by 20 UK creative graduates placed on JCDecaux digital screens at some of the UK’s busiest shopping centres, train stations and ad sites
It’s almost the weekend… Surely it’s time to create a smoothie in an exact Pantone shade?
New York design studio Project Projects has worked with typographer Aurèle Sack and fashion designer Mary Ping to create a new visual identity for Hong Kong shirt brand PYE. The minimal system features a bilingual logo and custom typeface inspired by the brand’s mathematical name.
The fashion and luxury industries have a reputation for seriousness, but over the last decade and a half luxury department store Harvey Nichols, with its ad agency adam&eveDDB, has shown that its customers will respond to humour too, especially if it comes with an edge. The brand’s marketing work may have received as many complaints as it has awards, but is impossible to ignore – we take an in-depth look at it here.
A new video for Floating Points’ track Silhouettes takes light painting to a whole new level