11.30.2011

randomopticalmusings

With an amazing eye for color, composition and technical proficiency, Eric Prine combines his creative vision with his gear and digital post-production knowledge to make quiet, thought provoking landscapes; environmental portraits and avant-garde architectural images.

© Eric Prine

When roaming the streets of NYC however, Eric likes to play!  Interested in the continuing progress of digital technology and social media, Eric uses his iPhone to document the everyday, using a variety of the different applications available.  If this is where the future of photography is headed, Eric's personal work makes it look worth exploring.  Check it out on his blog!

© Eric Prine

11.18.2011

Happy Anniversary!

There's a lot to running a small business that you can't possibly know until you take the plunge - and we've certainly plunged right in!  Two months after launching Claxton Represents we're still getting in the habit of doing our books and all the other not-cool-stuff we get to do now.  

On the flip side, however, we couldn't be luckier!  The roster of artists with Claxton Represents is so amazing, talented and diverse:  every day is fun and educational and filled with interesting projects.  The boring stuff is so much easier to deal with knowing how much we can trust each and every one of them to nail an assignment.  Their technical abilities, artistic skills, ingrained style are just that fantastic, and their personalities make it easy to stand behind them and their work 100%.  Plus we get to use their amazing imagery and talent to put together awesome promo's, we are constantly being inspired.

Here's a little inspiration for your weekend......


© Attic Fire

© Brian Leatart

© Eric Prine

© Joshua Cogan

© Maxwell Sorensen

© Brian Sorg

© John Foster


Want more?  Email us to request a book or a meeting!

11.08.2011

EDIT EDIT EDIT!

 Editing your own work is never easy- it's important to have a fresh set of eyes help you in the process. Brian and I decided to sit down and go through pieces for his new print portfolio. He prepared by printing thumbnails of his favorite work that matched with the marketing plan we laid out for him. He then placed them on the floor so we could view them as a whole and easily move them around. The whole experience reminded us of all the fun we had as children playing games on the floor (hey, it doesn't hurt to make the process enjoyable, right?). From here we edited our selections and paired up images for his initial layout.  This book is going to be awesome!  

Julia Stotz is lending her design sensibilities for the portfolio, check out her work @ tipinfold.juliastotz.com

Next steps:  final layout and print! We can't wait to show it to you.






We have also updated Brian's website!
check it out @ www.briansorgfoto.com

11.07.2011

No Plastic Sleeves!

No Plastic Sleeves is an amazing blog and a great resource for promo, portfolio, web design and branding ideas.  The website serves as an extension to the book, No Plastic Sleeves: The Complete Portfolio Guide for Photographers and Designers published by Focal Press.

Today they are featuring Joshua Cogan's amazing website!


Read about the site design @ www.noplasticsleeves.com

Experience Joshua's website @ www.joshuacogan.com

11.02.2011

Good people with some pretty awesome things.

ROCKPAPERINK is an awesome design blog that we would love even if they didn't love our John Foster as much as they do.  But they do!  Here is an interview where Emily Potts asks Mr. Foster some really good questions.




EP: Seriously, you're the most upbeat person I correspond with on a regular basis and it's usually first thing in the morning. Do you sprinkle crack on your cheerios?
JF: That's funny. I don't know that I see myself that way, but it is nice to be thought of as such. I am not much of a morning person but I also really love what I do, and I honestly wake up each morning dying to get back to it. Sleep gets in the way. By the time I talk to you, I have gotten my dogs out and fed and my daughter dressed/fed/lunch made and packed/dropped off at school, and pulled up at the office trying to present myself to the world as a grown up, so I am bright-eyed and bushy tailed. Mostly bushy tailed.
EP: John, when did you fall in love with poster design? What is the first poster you remember seeing and thinking, "I want to do that."
JF: I have a really cool Mom who bought me punk rock Clash t-shirts in the late '70s as a third grader so I was exposed to a lot of cutting edge design. I recall always having a high awareness for graphics/visuals, and there was no bigger format than the posters for my favorite bands and movies. Having said that, I had a drawing scholarship and acceptance into a stellar business program to choose from after high school, and I ended up doing neither and entered a design program in college trying to blend the two. That's when I really knew I wanted to do design. One of the recent grads who came back to teach a class was Dave Plunkert, and he and Paul Sahre were doing these groundbreaking theater posters—I was in awe. I couldn't imagine doing something that amazing. I still can't.
EP: What are your favorite printing techniques for your poster designs?
JF: Absolutely nothing beats going over a silkscreened print for me. Seeing the ink seep and dip, where the transparencies occur, the mix of colors, the inconsistencies and imperfections: So lo-fi, yet high art. It's personal. Like staring at a beautiful face for hours as you contemplate which eye is a little bigger than the other, and the little crease at the corner of the mouth seems to curve toward you, and soon you appreciate it on a much higher level.
EP: Do you start with a drawing then go to the computer? Explain your process a bit.
JF: Forever doodling, I remain a strong believer in sketching. I sketch all the time and usually start there. It can vary. I may pull out a paintbrush or a pencil and start working on images and type, or pull some old images and start manually manipulating them. It is still pretty organic and everything changes once I have the elements in my hands. I scan everything into the computer and then use this tiny silver machine in the same manner I do a brush or pen and push the pieces further. I love my laptop, but it is such a small portion of the design process for me. I "build" designs in my head really, and then the fun is seeing if I can get my hands and the computer to bring the final thing even remotely close to what I wanted.
EP: Tell me a little about the Poster of the Week column you’re going to do for rockpaperink.com, starting Nov. 2 and running every Wednesday.
JF: I’m so excited about this. It is hard to believe that my books can’t contain my enthusiasm for the poster medium, but they really can’t. Each week will feature a breathtaking poster hand-selected, with a little background info. I am really looking forward to being a weekly presence on the site, and I hope this becomes a bit of an honor and a flagpole for the international poster community.
EP: Who are your design heroes?
JF: Vaughan Oliver and the work of v23 were a HUGE inspiration to me. I know I am not alone in this, but never before or since has someone so brilliantly elevated the connection between music and design into it's own identifiable art form. Reid Miles was incredible and genre defining, and Oliver blows him out of the water. I spent years of my life studying those record sleeves.
Neville Brody and David Carson equally made me re-evaluate design at an important time in my life. I also think I would put artists that thought like designers, such as Basquiat, Haring, and certainly Warhol and Lichtenstein in there. Dave Plunkert was only a few years older than me in school and has been doing my favorite design and illustration work for decades. I know him, so it is funny to elevate him as such, but he certainly deserves to be in that company. He also showed me that you could come from our little program and actually DO it. The very definition of inspiring.
I am also still blown away by the work of current designers every day - simply too many to mention. That's why we have to do the poster of the week.

Want to know even more about John and his work?  
You can visit his website @ www.badpeoplegoodthings.com
Or just give us a call.  We love to dish and can talk on the phone for hours.