DANIEL ARSENAULT | www.scrattsurf.com
The Scratt Surf website looks a bit like an oldschool
zine, and there’s good reason for the resemblance:
Daniel Arsenault made the site’s
collage elements largely by hand. “I spend a lot
of time at Kinko’s,” he says. “It’s like doing a
high school yearbook when they cut and paste
things in the back with people’s faces.” While
he makes his living as an advertising photographer,
Arsenault considers himself an artist
first, and for the past three or four years he’s
been applying his collage work to custom surfboards.
This site promotes that side business,
so it’s only natural for the site’s design to mirror
the look and feel of the products.
To create his collages, Arsenault starts with hard copies of his photographs
and drawings. He takes these items to a copy machine to
manipulate sizes as he begins combining these and other elements
with low-tech tools ranging from scissors to tape. Once he’s satisfied with a creation, Arsenault photographs the collage and brings
it back into the computer. Here he’ll replace those low-quality
images—the ones ran through the copier—with high-quality versions,
and perhaps lay real type into the collage. This unusual process
produced the site’s engaging and authentic graphics. But at this
point, you might be wondering about the project’s name. It turns out
that a scratt is a cross between a squirrel and a rat—as well as a nickname
Arsenault earned for sleeping in his clothes for days on end.
Michelle Taute
Daniel Arsenault | ART DIRECTOR, DESIGNER, PHOTOGRAPHER, VIDEOGRAPHER: Daniel Arsenault
| PROGRAMMER, FLASH: Version-X Design | COPYWRITERS: Chris Drysdale, Daniel Arsenault
| MUSIC: “Wave Slave,” by Daniel Arsenault | AMBIENT MUSIC: El Patapsco | www.danielarsenault.com
HELLO DESIGN | www.eatbetteramerica.com
Having taken notice of recent studies indicating
an increasing interest in nutrition on the
part of baby boomers, General Mills sought to
create an online health platform to reach this
audience and anyone else wanting to improve
their well-being. Although conceived for those
entering the second half of life, Eatbetteramerica.
com is an easy-to-use resource for all who
desire to eat and live better.
“We know that, too often, nutritional information is boring,
confusing or just plain difficult to follow,” says Hello Design creative
director David Lai. “As one of the leading food companies
in the world, General Mills saw the need for a simple, straightforward
website that makes eating better easier and more fun.”
Divided into four sections—food, recipes, fitness and community—the site allows users to dig into a topic, with useful information
presented in a clean graphic style. This is a site that
appears uncomplicated, yet has significant breadth and depth of
content on the subject of living a healthy lifestyle. In developing
the information presented on the site, General Mills partnered
with health media giants Rodale and Lluminari to tap into their
expertise, as well as to collect articles, advice and tips that anyone
can benefit from.
Terry Lee Stone
Hello Design | CREATIVE DIRECTORS: David Lai, Hiro Niwa | PRODUCER: Szu Ann Chen
DESIGNER: Midori Yamanaka | PROGRAMMERS: Jason Taylor, Jon Lorenz, Sarah Grant | DEVELOPER: Hugo Zhu | QUALITY ASSURANCE: Morgan Weatherford | www.hellodesign.com
HELLO DESIGN | www.huntingtonconservatory.org
The Huntington Library designed and built
the conservatory, an interactive science center
for children and families, to aid its outreach in
botanical education. Combining the diversity
and beauty of a conservatory with the learning
experience of a science museum, the new facility
is designed to encourage children to learn
and build skills using real plants.
This website is a complementary element to the new conservatory.
It is targeted at kids 9-12 (along with their families and
classrooms) to encourage them to explore and learn about plants
through the conservatory’s three distinct environments: Tropical
Rain Forest, Cloud Forest and Temperate Bog. Site visitors
can learn about plants through a dynamic database or search for
plants by their location or interactions with other living things.
The site was actually designed to take its cues from plants. For
example, the navigation is an organic vine that comes down and
grows as users mouse over it. Features boxes have rounded edges
like leaves. “One of our favorite areas is the footer, which we call
the digital garden,” says Hello Design creative director David Lai.
“It allows visitors to plant their own digital plants on the site and
leave a little information about who they are and where they come
from. It was a fun idea to connect plant lovers around the world.”
Terry Lee Stone
Hello Design | CREATIVE DIRECTORS: David Lai, Hiro Niwa | PRODUCER: Szu An Chen | DESIGNER: Midori Yamanaka | DEVELOPER: Hugo Zhu | QUALITY ASSURANCE: Morgan Weatherford | www.hellodesign.com
IAMALWAYSHUNGRY | www.iamalwayshungry.com
The website for Nessim Higson’s creative studio,
iamalwayshungry, is structured around the
idea of dynamic abstraction. Algorithms were
used in its design, enabling various aspects of
the site to change on each visit. The goal is to
create a truly unique experience from visit to
visit and from person to person.
The website houses a variety of the studio’s work and doubles as
an archival system for anyone who visits. “To avoid redesigning it
every year or two, and out of sheer laziness, we made the structure
of the site flexible and dynamic for easy updates,” explains Higson.
“Another consideration that kept us up at night was accessibility.
We made sure anyone could view it no matter what, with
arrow keys, image activation or the main menu.” Just as important
as its structure is the use of motion in the site. Special attention
was given to how pieces transition on and off the screen, creating a
certain innate rhythm with the ebb and flow of the content. Using
the advantages of the latest Flash technology, imagery was given
specific properties and allowed to adjust according to surrounding
colors and elements, filling the screen. “As people begin to work on
larger monitors with higher resolution,” says Higson, “imagery can
and should begin to take on a higher importance.”
Terry Lee Stone
iamalwayshungry | creative director, art director, designer: Nessim Higson |
programmer, developer: Destin Young |
www.iamalwayshungry.com
IAMALWAYSHUNGRY | www.leecrum.com
The continually evolving website for photographer
Lee Crum was intended to be uniquely
engaging in order to grab people’s attention.
It’s a flexible site designed to allow multiple
uses for Crum and for viewers. “We were wanting
to create something that felt both like a
personal showcase and a gallery space—which,
in a way, become one and the same,” says Nessim
Higson, creative director of iamalwayshungry,
the site’s designer/developer.
The virtual space of the website feels very similar to the photographer’s
New Orleans gallery space. Crum has an extensive collection
of very ornate picture frames in his studio that he also wanted
to showcase on his site. By using them as a graphic metaphor to set
off Crum’s stark black-and-white imagery, the website effectively
captures a true sense of personality and aesthetic focus. Minimalist
graphics make the photographer’s work the focus. Navigation
can be done manually or simply left on autoplay. It uses x, y and z
axes so users feel as though they can closely investigate the photographs.
“We have continually approached the composition and
grouping of the photographs with a great deal of consideration. It
can be intriguing to see the groupings of work change from a different
gallery view,” notes Higson.
Terry Lee Stone
iamalwayshungry | CREATIVE DIRECTOR, ART DIRECTOR: Nessim Higson | DESIGNERS: Nessim Higson, Erik Kiesewetter | PROGRAMMER, DEVELOPER: Destin Young |
www.iamalwayshungry.com