The Table Cafe New Website
Very excited to finally be launching the new website for The Table Cafe coded by LuckLabs
Very excited to finally be launching the new website for The Table Cafe coded by LuckLabs
Is now live
Now I realise why Offf Atelier have re-branded their conference
After a design and development process of almost a year JW’s site has just gone live. It will be interesting to see whether the focus on SEO pays off over the coming months. No snake-oil here, just good structure, code and content. Thanks goes to developers With Associates.
My first Product Design - The totem proposed for the Table Cafe is proving to be a real humdinger. Not only must it have interchangeable panels to represent the different service times, but it must do so with the flawless simplicity of Allies and Morrison’s architecture. This means I’ve had to custom design the locking mechanism which holds the aluminium panels in place.
Working with Vicky Thornton on as set of patterns inspired by 1950s textile design. A lot of cross-over here with the work I’m doing for The Table.
Greenpeace UK have set up a campaign to redesign the BP logo, to more accurately reflect its current tarnished status, as well as to raise awareness about the company’s plans for extracting oil from tar sands. My first sketch ideas above - and the competition Flickr set.
Just submitted the latest signage ideas in the ongoing development of The Table’s identity, more here
Found this old artwork for my first cover of Index recently. The fine detail in the stencil (particularly the reporters camera) was produced with a laser cutter. Due to restrictive guidelines from the publishers - who demanded 2 colour printing- the piece had to be spray-painted in individual layers, scanned, then combined in photoshop and rendered as spot colours. more Index covers here
In Hong Kong, because of the space, apartments are small and expensive. Gary Chang, an architect, decided to design a 344 sq. ft. apartment to be able to change into 24 different designs, all by just sliding panels and walls. He calls this the “Domestic Transformer.”