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As Tiffany Meyers observes in her overview of the 100 winners, one can’t peg 2009 as the year of any specific color or typographic convention. But the winning projects are reflective of today’s increasingly diverse design discipline. In fact, one has to wonder if there is any longer such a thing as a design discipline—in light of today’s fast-changing and even amorphous practice, the word discipline seems a little out of place.
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Creating Typographic Shelf Life (cont'd)

Figure 1. Valentine uses all-cap copy to create a sense of elegance in the "Coffee Series" catalog for Neocon, but takes care to ensure that readability is not impared.
HOW DO YOU LIKE YOUR COFFEE? WITH INTERFACE
The “Coffee Series” catalog he produced for Neocon (an industry trade show) is quintessential Valentine. The piece was handed out with coffee at the show booth and is based around the idea that good carpet is like good coffee—a part of everyday life that is capable of being a luxury and comfort.

Product shots imply a story: a rumpled bed, a half-opened box, a pair of women’s shoes tossed casually aside. Flooring material is the product; the visual story makes it engaging. Text is sparse and set in Eureka with headlines in Franklin Gothic. Copy is centered but limited to three lines with open line spacing so there is no loss of readability.

Although the type is reversed out of the photographs, Franklin Gothic and Eureka are robust enough to maintain their integrity. Valentine also carefully placed the reversed copy in an area of the image where the background was solid or nearly solid.

Valentine skates to the edge of breaking a couple of important typographic rules in the two catalogs, but it is obvious he knows why the rules are there. He took the time and care to ensure the typography is not only stylish, but also sensible.


Figure 2. The typography in Country Home Magazine is a study in simplicity and taking advantage of page real estate.
COUNTRY HOME
The redesign of Country Home magazine is another example of Valentine’s melding of image and typography. Here, he used Bil’ak’s Fedra and Benton Gothic from The Font Bureau, to create what he calls “a typographic hierarchy.” While type plays a supporting role in the FLOR catalogs, in Country Home it shares equal billing with the photographs and images. Copy blocks take up a fair share of page real estate and often the type is set large. Valentine’s rule of not setting type in solid black, the occasional sprinkling of color within the text, and ample line space, however, keep the copy inviting and engaging. A simple yet elegant system of numbering illustrations also ensures that the sometimes numerous images on a page are easily linked to their captions.

While he was given a well-defined suite of parameters for the redesign, Valentine was not given total control. Country Home only wanted a design template and a few sample pages. In projects like these, Valentine prefers complete control of the magazine for several issues. “I think it is important to live with a magazine for several issues before I turn it over completely to the internal design staff,” he says. “It’s not an ‘ownership’ thing. Designing three to four issues gives me the opportunity to work through the inevitable design problems that will arise.” If Country Home continues to follow his template, it should uphold Valentine’s high standards.

When asked if he had one piece of typographic advice for young designers, Valentine’s answer was uncharacteristically quick. “Be sure the type is appropriate to the piece, the environment, and the reader.” His typography is that—and more. Robert Valentine’s work is a lesson in grace and pulchritude, and a service to readers.

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