Archive for the ‘Happenings’ Category

The Big Draw

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Big Draw 2011 is a local success story that demonstrates the influence of graphic design on our personal lives and the world. Here’s a quick interview I did with Mariann Seriff, our Creative Director, about her participation in this annual event.


What is the Big Draw and how did you get involved?

Big Draw started five years ago at North Chevy Chase Elementary, a school in suburban Washington, DC. The goal was to give 3rd to 5th graders an opportunity to spend the day learning about drawing, painting, sculpting and design.  Last year, I joined a team of designers to introduce the classes to graphic design and typography. Adriana Cordero, led our group, and Eva Santorini and I were her co-teachers. It was so much fun, I went back for Big Draw 2011 last week.

What happens during the day?
We make presentations in four classes. It’s a combination of showing the children what we do as designers and giving them a chance to experiment themselves with design.

We talk about fonts and how each style communicates a different message. Then we give the kids a couple of projects. One is outlining large letterforms on tracing paper and filling in the negative space. Then we give them an entire alphabet in several fonts and let them trace the letterforms to create a typographic self-portrait.

Have you noticed how technology is changing the children and how they respond to design?
In some ways, the kids are more sophisticated than they used to be, because they have access to so many kinds of communication. At the same time, they are really unaware of how much they are influenced by what’s around them.

We show them books, CDs, videos and stamps as examples of design, then ask them, “Is there anything in this room that a designer designs? Some of them spot type on a friend’s t-shirt or a Nike logo. Then the light goes on, and they start seeing design everywhere.

This year I showed an animation clip I did for Smile Train as part of my masters program. I fully expected the kids to say, “Hey, I made a movie, too.” You know many of these kids are playing around with technology on their classroom computer or at home. As adults, we underestimate how much it’s just a part of their everyday lives.

Why is Big Draw important to you?
It’s exciting to see the kids “get it.” Kids don’t often have a chance to be creative in school because their time is so focused on making the grade. I can give them a new way to look at the world and give them some simple tools to have fun with. To see how kids latch onto the ideas and go with it is really rewarding.

I congratulate the school for hosting Big Draw Day. The students love it, and look forward to it. They have a day of exposure to such a wide variety of art. We are warmly welcomed by the whole community, from the principal to the teachers to the parents.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Holiday wishes from Graves Fowler Creative

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

We wish you happy times and good cheer. Graves Fowler Creative will be closed on December 23, 24 and 31 to make merry with family and friends.

National Design Week 2010

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

American Institute of Graphic Arts DC is hosting a week of activities to celebrate National Design Week 2010. The whole idea for a commemorative week started in 2006 at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum in New York and has spread across the country. DC events are kicking off with a “When Lightning Strikes” evening to talk about where and what inspires our design work. Organizers invited us to send in images that will spark discussion. Here are a couple that came from Vicky Robinson and Jeff Everett in our office. Bet you can’t guess who sent in what photo…

Travel. Any travel is inspiring to me. I love observing and absorbing the local architecture, cultural aesthetic, and unique colors of the landscape.

Direct impact, hard work, intensity, a desire to perform though people may not take you seriously. Henry Rollins/Black Flag inspire me!

A new generation of poster makers

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

Jeff Everett spent last Friday cultivating new designers at Pine Crest elementary school in Silver Spring, Maryland. This is Jeff’s third year of volunteering to teach children about graphic arts. Sixty students screen printed mini-posters and added colored for parents and school displays. Hands-on art in a digital world is all too rare. Thanks, Jeff, for keeping the craft alive.

We did it! The move is done. Well, almost.

Monday, November 1st, 2010

The marathon weekend of packing and loading and moving is now behind us. This Monday morning we’re sitting in the sunny, freshly painted walls of our new offices. Still lots of boxes to unpack, but we’re settling in quickly to our new building in Gaithersburg on the same floor as our web technology partner, Blue Atlas Interactive. It’s exciting to make this change and be able to work together on a daily basis to provide new technology and social media tools that are practical and profitable for our clients.

Here’s the new address:
12 S. Summit Avenue, Suite 325
Gaithersburg, MD 20877

“god cre-etid evrithing”

Friday, September 24th, 2010

Every fall my partner Terry Graves runs around Washington, DC, directing photo shoots for the fundraising campaign materials we create to promote the annual Archbishop’s Appeal. She’s in and out of hospitals, food pantries, parishes and schools trying to capture the story of the impact donations make throughout the Archdiocese of Washington. After she and the photographer set up shop at Sacred Heart school this week, the children sent thank yous for picking their school to visit. Had to share this one with the world.

Social seniors. We’re all over Facebook.

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

The Pew Research Center (love these folks!) have just released a new report on older adults and social media. It’s no surprise to me that the study shows use of Facebook and Twitter is mushrooming with this group. They’re talking about my people!

This past summer I traveled with a bunch of 60+ folks on a cross continent bicycle adventure. No matter how many miles we covered or how tired the riders were, at the end of the day there was always time for Facebook. That’s the way we kept up with family back home and posted how we were doing.

I’m amazed how Facebook is spreading. Just got a new Friend invitation from Frances. She’s 87. Looks like Generations X and Y will have to skootch over for their elders once again.

Congratulations to Global Impact

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Global Impact, a nonprofit organization that assures help for the world’s most vulnerable people, has received honors from the Washington Post as a finalist in the 2010 Excellence in Nonprofit Management Awards. We’re proud of them, and proud also to be working with them for a second year on the Combined Federal Campaign for the National Capital Area. Congratulations to all the Global Impact staff! Award announcement details.

Working on the road

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

When my husband decided to ride his bicycle across the country to raise money for our local food bank, I jumped in to volunteer as the support vehicle. Of course I planned to continue to work as we traveled 70 miles a day from San Francisco to Maine. How hard could it be to take my laptop and keep on writing?

The answer is HARD. I’m in a motor home with electricity. I have a MiFi, portable printer, iMac Pro and iPhone. But just sorting out the wires and cables is a nightmare! There are four of us living in this traveling “office.” In the evening, we all log on for blogging, email, photo downloads, etc. The motor home is sucking juice like crazy. And did I mention what access to cell towers is like in Eureka, Nevada?

technology

The upside is that I am working with a view of snow covered mountains and desert wildflowers. So I won’t complain too much. Learn more about the ride.

Does it make sense to jump on the social media bandwagon?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

The short answer is yes. But the more complicated answer that gets into “why” and “how” is just beginning to unfold here at Graves Fowler. Setting up a page on Flickr, Twitter and Facebook takes almost no time. Making these tools a valuable part of an organization’s marketing and outreach is more complicated. Here are a few things we’ve learned so far.

1. Take social media seriously. This isn’t a fad that will go away. While the tools may change, this kind of communication is only going to become more important all the time. I recently heard at the Social Media Summit that mobile applications today are where the Internet was in the late 1990s, and they are poised to have just as much impact.

2. Social media is part of smart marketing strategy. The key word here is “strategy.” Almost anyone can set up a Twitter page and start using it. But making it a valuable tool in your overall marketing mix is more complicated. With the right planning and execution, however, you can set goals and expect measurable results.

3. Social media doesn’t manage itself. It’s less expensive and more labor intensive than other kinds of marketing. Social media is social. It’s relevant only when there is active, two-way communication that finds current and potential supporters or customers and builds a relationship with them. That takes dedicated daily time.

So come on board. Get a feel for how the social media sites work on a small-scale personal level, then get serious and let the marketing folks put it to work for you.