Information

Editor in chief: Yoshihisa Ishihara
Assistant Editor: Tadashi Hamada
Editorial Cooperation: Ohchi Design Office
Editorial Cooperation: Midori Imatake
Cover design: Toon Michiels (Total Design)

Content includes:
Toon Michiels by Shigeru Watano
Works of Roland Young by Louis Danzinger, Layout: Takenobu Igarashi Design Office
Interview with Roland Young by Chuck Casell
The Society of Illustrators’ 20th Annual National Exhibition by Doug Johnson and Shinichiro Tora
Henry Dreyfuss and a tool for designer
Johnn Munday
Jeffrey Schrier by Shinichiro Tora
Jacques N. Garamond
Kenji Itoh and “Kappa Novels” by Shinichi Segi
John deCesare Interviewer: Midori Imatake
4 Art Directors in Japan
7 New Design Powers by Kazumasa Nagai
’78 Graduation Works of Graphic Students
The 38th Annual Exhibition of Art Culture Association

Details

Linked Information

Idea 149 1978 7
Idea 149, 1978-7. Cover design by Toon Michiels (Total Design)
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

Rudolph de Harak designed over 50 record covers for Westminster Records as well as designing covers for Columbia, Oxford and Circle record labels. His bright, geometric graphics can easily be distinguished and recognised.

Members Content

The typographic designs produced for the National Theatre by Ken Briggs are not only iconic and depict the Swiss typographic style of the time, but remain a key example of the creation of a cohesive brand style.

Members Content

I first came across Kens work in the Unit Edition’s superb monograph, Structure and Substance, published in 2012. Although I had owned a few of the British industrial design magazines, Design, for a few years before, in which Ken had designed numerous covers for.
In the ambitious new monograph Rational Simplicity: Rudolph de Harak, Graphic Designer, Volume shines a light on the complete arc of the exceptionally rich and varied career of Rudolph de Harak, showcasing his vibrant, graphic, formally brilliant work, which blazed a colourful trail through the middle decades of the twentieth century.