Archive for the Design Legends of St. Louis Category

January 2012

TOKY Nominated for 11 ADDY Awards!

TOKY HQ is running high on high-fives, having just learned that we’re up for 11 ADDY awards in this year’s St. Louis competition. We’re particularly pleased with how well the range of work represents our firm’s concentrations, from arts and culture (Laumeier Sculpture Park, CAM, the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, Opera Theatre of Saint Louis) to premium products (Panera Bread) to ”world changers,” as we call them (St. Louis Public Library Foundation, Food Outreach). Congrats to the entire TOKY team, and to the clients we worked with on the projects!

Here’s a look at the TOKY work that’s being recognized this year:

1. “Texts in the City” Invitation, St. Louis Public Library Foundation (related blog post)

2. Contemporary Fund Mailer, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

3. “Share the Season” Packaging, Panera Bread (related blog post)

4. stylus box/catalogue, The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts

5. Grab grassy this moment your I’s catalogue, Laumeier Sculpture Park (related blog post)

6. 2011 Season Poster, Opera Theatre of Saint Louis

7. Dreamscapes website, The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts

8. “Design Legends of St. Louis“ Video Series, AIGA St. Louis (one of five videos is shown above)

9. “Return to Summer” In-Store, Panera Bread (related gallery at Facebook)

10. “Share the Season” In-Store, Panera Bread (related blog post)

11. “A Tasteful Affair” Invitation, Food Outreach

Our thanks to the ADDY judges who have recognized this work! We’re looking forward to celebrating St. Louis creativity with our colleagues at the February ceremony.

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July 2011

New Design Legend Video: Stan Gellman

We’ve just posted our fourth full-length video of “Design Legends of St. Louis”, a video portrait of Designer Stan Gellman. View all Design Legends

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June 2011

New Design Legend Video: Frank Roth

We’ve just posted our third full-length video of “Design Legends of St. Louis”, a video portrait of Frank Roth.

Many of our town’s great designers, illustrators and account managers worked at Frank’s agency, Frank James Productions.  Frank’s design legend began when he was in high school working for a photographer in the 1940’s. He received his B.F.A. at the Washington University School of Fine Arts, was an adjunct professor there for about 40 years, and is the recipient of over 250 design and art direction awards. He’s back to photography – digital this time around – and shows his work at several local galleries. Frank is a real storyteller. Take look at the video, you’ll see.

Can you guess who might be next?

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June 2011

New Design Legend Video: Bob Falk

View more at: STLdesignlegends.com

We’ve just posted our second full-length video of “Design Legends of St. Louis”, a video portrait of Bob Falk.

Most people know Bob from Falk-Harrison, now helmed by his sons, Jon and Matt, and their partner Steve Harrison. Bob has had a long, successful – and fascinating career.

He shares some great stories – from his college days at Washington University, working up the nerve to ask the great Ivan Chermayeff to look at his portfolio, projecting images onto the Old Post Office during an all-nighter with his design buds at Obata, to being hired by Chip Reay at HOK, to how he decided to start his own company.

We’ll be posting the next “Design Legends” Profile, on Frank Roth, in mid-June. Please let us know how you like these, and share them with your friends!

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May 2011

Portrait of a gentleman designer: “Design Legends of St. Louis / Dick Juenger”

We’ve posted the first of our full-length videos of “Design Legends of St. Louis”, a video portrait of Dick Juenger.

Dick is one of the nicest, most decent guys around, and here talks about his history at Gardner Advertising in the 40′s and 50′s, his co-founding of Obata Studios in the 60′s, and his freelance business in the 70′s and 80′s. His beautiful hand-lettering for Budweiser’s calligraphic labels is still gorgeous after all these years.

I met Dick when I had just graduated from college, and was shopping my oh-so Swiss-inspired portfolio around. I showed up at Dick’s downtown studio, surrounded by his delicate calligraphy and hand-lettering. Dick was encouraging and enthusiastic, while gently guiding me to excise some of my more egregious typographic experiments and all of my then-precious Man Ray inspired photograms (clones, more accurately). I left his office feeling better about myself and better about my portfolio than when I had gone in.

Four years later (1984 or so) I designed a logo for HealthLink Corporation — a logo which, astoundingly, is still in use today — and I used Dick’s typeface “Jana” as basis for the logotype font. Then, around ten years ago I was gratified to see that Doyald Young had included Jana in his masterful “Logotypes & Letterforms” book.

Jana is a font that still has strong associations of a certain time and culture. One of my favorite uses is in “The Divorcee” movie poster. The copy alone is tasteless — and priceless. Never has such a great typeface by such a gentleman been used to shill so base a product.

We’ll be posting the next “Design Legends” profile, this one on Bob Falk, on June 3. Frank Roth’s profile will follow in mid-June.  Please let us know how you like these, and share with your friends and associates.

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