Design, Council of Industrial Design, 313, January 1975

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Content includes:
Cover the Montreal Olympic logo is the work of Georges Huel
Projects and developments, Things seen, New products, Diary
Montreal Olympics the buildings. Pamela Ferguson describes the political turmoil surrounding their design
Montreal Olympics the graphics. Georges Huel tells Pamela Ferguson about their development
Electronic ignition Phillip Hill explains why a £10 development is too costly
DIA’s Diamond Jubilee Sir Misha Black examines the old ‘fitness for purpose’ slogan
Also rans outstanding but unused design projects, described by Alastair Best
Free for all an image for giveaway magazines. Report by David White
Exhibition stands poor design tends to be the rule.
Not so much a bus more a rolling hospital kit. David Rowlands describes a British Leland project

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Design, Council of Industrial Design, 313, January 1975. Cover design by Georges Huel
Design, Council of Industrial Design, 313, January 1975. Cover design by Georges Huel
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His distinctive style echoes the artistic expressions of fellow Italian designers Giovanni Pintori and Erberto Carboni. Tovaglia's mastery in taking concepts and translating them into visually compelling narratives is evident in this selection of advertisements I have scanned from Gebrauchsgraphik, 10, 1955.

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In the late 1950s, Hans W. Brose agency, with designers Pierre Mendell, Michael Engelmann, and Klaus Oberer, crafted a compelling, colourless campaign for Bols.
Support American Bauhaus on Kickstarter to pre-finance the project and its production: www.kickstarter.com/projects/908813786/american-bauhaus
In the late 1960s, IBM was one of the world’s pre-eminent corporations, employing over 250,000 people in 100 countries. While Paul Rand’s creative genius has been well documented, the work of the IBM staff designers who executed his intent outlined in the IBM Design Guide has often gone unnoticed.