LAST YEAR I SAID IN THIS SPACE THAT THE 2006 STEP DESIGN 100 WINNERS WERE THE LOVELIEST
BODY OF WORK I’D EVER SEEN, AND I HOPED—BUT DIDN’T DARE PREDICT—THAT THIS
TREND WOULD CONTINUE. I SHOULD HAVE PREDICTED. THIS YEAR’S WINNING CROP IS SO
FRESH AND CLEAN IT WAS A REAL PLEASURE TO REVIEW. THERE’S LESS WASTED MOTION AND
LESS AFFECTATION THAN EVER, PLUS LOTS OF GOOD DESIGN AND SEVERAL NEW MOVEMENTS.
Now, we do have to make the usual disclaimer: By far the majority of
these works were commissioned by art-world or out-of-the-mainstream
clients, and they’ve been further filtered through a panel of sophisticated
judges. Plus, there are but 100 winners in the STEP competition, so the
sample isn’t exactly representative of design in the culture at large. This
collection is even more rarified than usual. Last year we had about 18 editorial
and book design entries. This year there are 29. Last year, there
were 15 posters. This year there are 23. Last year there were 14 packaging
entries; this year there are only six. I think you can see the pattern—this
is a very art-oriented bunch of winners.
But as we say every year, trends are established by trendsetters,
so let’s proceed. Keep in mind that many of the examples here follow
several trends—which is partly why I think they’re trends. You
may have to flip back and forth a bit to get the idea.
VARIATIONS WITHIN THEMES (A)
Identities with a range of business card designs are a trend that’s
continuing. We’re not tired of it, and we imagine that employees
and their clients enjoy it, too. [1] 
VARIATIONS WITHIN THEMES (B)
While many of the winning entries in this year’s Design 100 have
strong visual themes, their designers have used all kinds of variations
to create interest and pacing. A page with a checkerboard of
images is followed by a single image across the spread and then a
page with a row of images across the top and solid color below and
so on. In other cases, the format changes entirely from section to
section, in keeping with the nature of the content. [2]

SHINY, SHINY TEXTURES
The Sino identity (page 81) and Lemon magazine bring
another, newer trope: high-gloss spot varnishes and shimmering
surfaces. In some cases, spot varnishes are being laid down in rich
patterns so thickly that they add texture to the page. Lots of other
entries use glossy spot varnishes too subtly to guarantee good
reproduction in these pages, so you’ll just have to take my word
that it’s definitely a big trend. [3]

LET’S GET HORIZONTAL
Many of these entries have a strong horizontal emphasis. We see
photos strung across a spread in one row, and copy blocks strung
above or below them in another row with generous white space
between. [4] 
We also see lots of horizontal tension, as when one
page has a full-bleed image, and on the opposite page one small
image or line of type sits as far away as it can get. This is basic
Good Design, and it will never stop working. [5]

LET’S GET VERTICAL
For some reason, a bunch of designers are running type up the page instead of
across it. This isn’t necessarily hurting legibility, though, because the type is
big, or the copy is not vital to the story, or only a few words are affected. [6]

DISCIPLINED TYPOGRAPHY
Overall, this is the year of disciplined type—just flip through the following
pages of winning projects, and you’ll see. Most of the text is set into justified blocks, and either lined up across the spread or asymmetrically balanced.
There are very few inventive fonts or settings, so when they occur they really
stand out, as in the Daycorp brochure that also illustrates the horizontal
trend. We still see what could be called “industrial” typesetting, where
text is set into ruled boxes like the title blocks on blueprints, but at this point
the rules are there to organize and isolate the content and not to support an
industrial look. [7]

BLACK IS THE NEW BLACK
Last year, brown was the new black. This year, black is back. So is the traditional
designer’s palette: black and white; black, white and red; black with silver;
or black and red, silver and gray. Take a look at Lemon magazine, the YRC
annual and the Teague book. There are lots more. [8] 
A
newer trend is to pair black with brilliant colors, which practically glow by
contrast. [9]
