September 9th, 2008

SundstromMarketing.com Now Online!

I had the pleasure of working with Alice Sundstrom over the past few months to develop and deploy a site for her firm. As principle of Sundstrom Marketing Design, Alice wanted a site which featured her companies commitment to marketing communications for higher education. Sundstrom Marketing Design offers three central services for it’s clients: strategic planning, project management, and design services.

The largest section of the site is the portfolio section which features many pieces of work honored by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). Innovative, professional, clean and effective would be words I would use to describe many of the pieces in the portfolio section.

Specializing in marketing communication efforts for institutions of higher education, Sundstrom Marketing Design is very well positioned to help colleges and universities engage students, propects, and potential donors. Alice’s experience at the University of Oregon and her background in fine arts really makes her an excellent resource for many departments and university marketing offices seeking to solidify their brand and meet their marketing goals.

September 7th, 2008

Organic Church Growth

As mentioned in my pithy bio, I’m not only a graphic designer, but also a Church Planter. My wife and I pastor a small church plant in Springfield, OR and we are currently working of a document to help secure funding from our denomination. In that document we talk about our methodology. Along with our commitment to the Christian Community Development ideals of Relocation, Redistribution, and Reconciliation we also are committed to the concept of organic church growth.

Now this word organic, does tend to be a trendy word these days – especially in the emerging church world. But I feel after nearly nine months of church planting this is exactly a part of us. Over the summer, Karlene and I have attempted – albeit it a feeble attempt – to grow a garden. We planted tomatoes, pumpkins, cucumbers, yellow squash, corn, peas, and beans. After planting them, we watered them, and waited for them to come up. Some of them did, and some didn’t. Some bore fruit right away and others still haven’t. Some of it grew and then died.

As we’ve been “planting” the church, I feel kind of like the same thing is happening. Some of the things that we were expecting to pop it’s head up out of the ground, never really materialized. Other times, some of the people who were walking alongside us didn’t find the soil nourishing for them, so they had to leave before bearing any fruit.

But the best part of the whole thing is being surprised at the most inopportune times at the sweet fruit which is growing among us. The other day, when I had just about given up on the summer squash I went out out found the start of five or six fruit. Similarly, this week one of our “congregants” had been talking about the tenuous (at best) relationship between the street kids and downtown Eugene business owners. We talked about it for awhile but didn’t really come up with a plan to help the situation. However, she planted a seed by writing a letter to the Eugene Weekly inviting street kids to prove business owners wrong through kind acts. That letter appeared Thursday on a huge piece of paper hanging from the Eugene public library with a colorful mosaic border. Seed of change produced a message of hope and fruit in our community.

As we continue to venture in this world of church planting, I’m continually amazed at the organic nature of this endeavor. As gardeners, we can prune and create conditions of growth, but only to be continually amazed at the beauty of the fruit – unexpected at times – that comes at the most opportune moments.

September 5th, 2008

Boticelli’s Venus Needed a Modern Day Tune-Up Apparently

I was looking for tees for my cousins the other day on threadless and came across a shirt that I thought was pretty darn funny. Sandro Boticelli’s Birth of Venus is perhaps one of the most beloved works of art in the world…certainly of the Italian Renaissance centered in Florence. I’ve had the opportunity to see her twice in person at the Uffizi Museum and the detail, balance and proportion of her figure is painstakingly perfected (even if she does have a slightly elongated neck).

Birth of Venus gets a nip and tuckThe tee on threadless (and seen here) seems to think that she has not quite been perfected and requires a tune up in her age (she is nearing 300 years, afterall). Along with being funny it is a great testament to our culture’s inability to deal with aging and the incredible pressures we put on women in regards to beauty and physical appearance. Botticelli, along with all the other great Renaissance artists, focused on the perfection of the human form. But there was something intuitively natural about this perfection. Humanism, at it’s very nature is the essence of natural human perfection. It is ironic, and indeed this shirt design suggests that maybe we have gone too far in our pursuit of perfection in the human form that we must subjugate ourselves to unnatural means.

I know that this shirt is intended to be funny, and, indeed, I do find it so. But at the same time it raises an entry point in its irony to our cultures infatuation with beauty.

July 11th, 2008

Expression Engine Review

Over the past few weeks I’ve been busy with – among other things – launching my very first website built with the powerful content management application Expression Engine. The site – Living Hope Church – is a fully functional site, providing the client with full access to all of the content on the site, the ability to upload images, blog posts, add pages to site sections, calendar events, and even a podcast. Expression Engine’s architecture makes it flexible to provide a user-intuitive experience on the back-end, easily providing markers for separate content areas.

From a programming perspective, EE is much easier to code than WordPress, which requires you to code natively in php. That said, the learning curve for EE was pretty high, although no more than WordPress. The upside is that the EE forums are par excellence and I was able to get quick information from the EE community.

The capabilities of the CMS make creating multiple content types, relationships, filters and more very easy. The ability to use mulitple “weblogs” – that is, database tables to store information – and to be able to add custom fields and categories to each, means that the publish page if fully customizable to the needs of the content, not the other way around. This for me, is a huge asset. Before, while using WordPress, I was forced to bend content around the entry areas. Not so with EE.

That said, I’m not all rosey about EE. My major beef with it so far has to do with typography and the publish area. For client needs, unless they will simply be entering plain text, the textarea for data inputs provide no provision for the client to easily manipulate markup without using HTML tags, which provides for some pretty messy data entry areas, especially when creating unordered lists. Out of the box EE’s only option for clients is to learn bits and pieces of HTML, which in my world of clients isn’t a very good option.

There are extension options. However, the WYSIWYG extensions produce awful code and if a client copies and pastes from Word, they often ruin any consistency in design you might have pined for. I did find an extension which installs Markitup, an excellent jquery plugin which lets you use textile markup, making the process of marking up the content much easier. That said, it’s still a bit buggy and I can’t get it to work on another site I’m building in EE. Ugh.

All in all, I’m sold. At $99 for a non-commercial/personal/non-profit license and $249 for a commercial license it’s a no brainer for its ease of use and customization. As I look onto much more complex jobs, EE astounds me at its ability to perform. As a one-man-design-shop, I find it a very helpful tool in my arsenal.

If you’re interested in learning more about Expression Engine, I would suggest heading over to Michael Boyink’s site Train-EE. He provides some great tutorials for free and some nice screencasts and e-books for purchase.

January 5th, 2008

Why I’m a Content Activist…

Today, I was browsing some of the fine sites included on the CSS Mania site and came across a design site, in which the owner states that the three “ingredients for a spectacular web site” are: (1) beautiful design, (2) rock solid markup, and (3) attention to the details. While I agree that all of these are important to the design process, I disagree with the author (and the design strategy) and contend that the most important ingredient for a spectacular web site is great content! As a designer, I am constantly running into the challenge of creating pieces that have more effectiveness than simply “looking pretty.” Message, tone, intention, target audience are all affected by the content (as content is often affected by all of these things as well).

No matter how much we, as designers, want to get paid for our skills, if there is no message or content, there really can’t be a website. The web, while evolving, is still a content-driven medium. I’ve recently been reading Kelly Goto and Emily Cotler’s excellent Web Design 2.0: Workflow that Works and it suggests a workflow that actually begins with content generation. While so unintuitive to the designer, I believe that Goto and Cotler are 100% correct in their placement of content at the beginning of the design process. Content mediates all that we do in the design process, and is the starting point, rather than ending point of our work as designers. Content drives traffic, be it on commerce sites or personal blogs. Blogs which don’t say anything (or anything new, as is the unfortunate case of this blog) could be beautifully designed, executed with technical perfection, and focus on every aesthetic detail, yet still end up with no visitors.

What I’ve found lately is that clients, and users, care more about content than they do about XHTML and CSS. I know that personally, I’ve become a web-standards activist with my clients, advocating the necessity for standards compliance (accessibility, portability, browser compatibility, et al). But I’ve also become a content activist with my clients, guiding them through the complexity of finding their voice, describing their product in ways that are meaningful, and developing a message that is focused on what their customers want and need to hear.