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Giants of Rugby

Tim from Hat-trick design sent me some images of their recent Giants of Rugby project, which he must have had some sort of sixth sense about, because it was right up my street. In fact, it’s very similar to something I’ve done for another sport-related project, but I’m not allowed to show you yet. I loved it when I saw it recently at their Typographic Circle talk, but couldn’t find much evidence of it online.

Anyway, as it’s Hat-trick, it’s pretty self explanatory. The giants of Rugby, made from little Rugby shirt icons, and printed at massive scale at Twickenham Stadium.

Which reminds me, their identity for the stadium itself was lovely too…

Apparently, Rugby is like footyball, but you’re allowed to pick the ball up and hit people.




Hat-trick

I went along to the sold out Typographic Circle lecture last week by Hat-trick Design and I’m glad I got a ticket because it was fantastic.

In what was possibly the exact opposite of the recent Neville Brody D&AD lecture, they told us straight away that they intended to show us 30 projects in 60 minutes. And while Brody relished operating on some kind of higher plane to his audience, Jim and Gareth from Hat-trick were pointedly down to earth about the whole thing.

You’ve probably worked out that the self imposed format meant there would only 2 minutes to talk about each project, but the thing with Hat-trick’s work is that it is so well engineered and idea-centric that 2 minutes is generous. The concept hits you in the face as soon as the JPG flashes onto the screen, and a moment later you’re wishing you had thought of it yourself. That left an average of 110 further seconds to look at it and become increasingly envious before the next project was revealed. 30 times.

“Most of these projects are fairly self-explanatory”

Coming from an environment where even the simplest idea is explained by a 50 page PowerPoint deck and a conference room for the morning, I loved the efficiency of it. So, I’ll be similarly to the point here, and show some of my favourites from the evening along with the odd quote I managed to scribble down. I’ve gathered all of these images from the internet, as, while I did take my camera to the event, I was forced to watch it all through a tiny gap between the neck and ear-lobe of the guy sat in front of me.



Remembrance stamps for the Royal British Legion



Can you see the ••• – - – ••• ‘SOS’ perforations in this coastguard set? Genius.



Apparently Darwin was related to apes. Who knew?

“The first thoughts are usually the right ones”



Bright sparks from the Norwich University College of Arts



Regular readers will remember this one…



House of Illustration identity

There was loads more, I won’t post everything here. I only wish I had been brave enough to ask questions at the end, but for some reason the Typographic Circle had decided to turn the heating up to insane levels and I was about to pass out due to dehydration. Don’t worry though, there was a pub next door.

I would have asked about what other work they do, as not every project has a perfect outcome or client relationship. Especially when they started out, they must have had to produce some work that they had less control over and had to acknowledge would never be an award-winner. Although these days they’re design industry stars, that position took some earning and I’d like to have heard about the journey from hard reality to design driving seat. The D&AD wouldn’t let just anyone walk off with a silver pencil for a self initiated project without an actual brief or real client, but that shows you how far Hat-trick have come. And rather depressingly told me how far I still have to go.

Hat-trick seem to have ascended to such heights that they can convince any client to indulge their creative whims, talking property developers into letting them do stop frame animation, or The Salvation Army into going all trendy. All this is particularly frustrating when I possess first-hand knowledge that it’s next to impossible to get a corporate branding client to have any real print done instead of a PDF, or to consider any kind of brochure that isn’t A4.



Jim Sutherland’s mind boggling typographic playing cards which appealed greatly to my OCD gene.

I think one of the main things I took away from the talk was the scale of their ambition. Even though they’re a small company, they relentlessly tackle big projects, as well as the little creative urges, and throw themselves into things they not necessarily already know how to do. That’s how you get better you see.

Oh, and one last quote from the evening:

“If the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem is a nail.”

Go to their website immediately and look at the rest of their work.