January 2008
See Jen Tyers works on paper at Helen Gory

We have worked with Jen and now everyone can enjoy her work in the flesh too. You can even buy a piece of Jen’s work if you so desire.
Silent Forest by Jennifer Tyers
January 31 to March 1
to be opened by Dr David Hansen
Helen Gory Gallery
Thursday 31 January, 6 to 8pm
Open from Tuesday to Saturday, 11am - 6pm.
25 St Edmonds Road, Prahran Victoria 3181, Australia
Tel +61 3 9525 2808
Image details: Pinata (forest), Watercolour on cotton rag paper, 57 x 77cm, 2007
Visit Jen’s website here
Visit Helen Gory here
A job for a Paperpoint




Paperpoint’s name says it all, and one would expect that a place that brings paper and people together would have a promotion that does one in the same. Five types of paper, four colour process printing by Gunn & Taylor, a Canadian fold, gummed pad, some copy, a table and a cut paper illustration. Visit Paperpoint here or call 9682 9414 for your pad.
No commentsPrinting stands up to be counted…
Finally printing has a voice that the rest of the population may take notice of. Is this guy available for plugging graphic designers? Nice one Pazazz.
1 commentThe Beresford Hotel, brand and font preview
We collaborated with Mahon & Band to develop image and brand work for a newly renovated bar, restaurant and venue complex for The Beresford Hotel in Sydney’s Surry Hills. The client required an art deco feel to align with the history of this iconic pub.
Several approaches contributed to this outcome which included developing this customised typeface, which is untitled. The client wanted “new deco” to reflect his state-of-the-art art deco pub. After an extensive concept development stage we found a small type sample that captured the client’s vision for new deco – from an out-of-the-way sculpture in London “Seven Ages of Man” created by Richard Kindersley. After several weeks of character design, drafting, refinement and tweaking we developed a complete uppercase font and numbers set, which we developed into the typemark.
David Band has also developed several new artworks which we will build into the suite of work for all the new spaces within the venue.





A little big ballad turns 30 years.
“English Rose” by The Jam was released in 1978. The Jam heralded the “Mod revival” of the late Seventies. Their early music was “formally” punk - short, ass-kicking songs with a lot of aggression - but unlike so many of their brethren, the Jam never even tried to conceal that all they were doing was reviving the forgotten traditions of Sixties’ garage-rock and mod-rock.Source (amazing) http://starling.rinet.ru/music/index.htm
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