DOT Identity

DOT
1.0
introduction
The DOT profile has been one of our passion projects, as we saw a huge potential in their work. Here lies an opportunity for an authentic, geeky and hugely popular brand we believe — and working on this has been an absolute pleasure from the first conversations to when the merchandise is worn at every festival. DOT is an event organisation, deeply embedded in the culture of the Norwegian Electronic music and clubbing scene. In record time they have built up an audience and a reputation on the scale of European majors, but have lacked a unified design system and a visual cohesion to go with it. After some preliminary talks, we decided to commission them in constructing a mission statement — a short document detailing their goals and intent:

MISSION-STATEMENT.txt

We believe people want unique experiences, discoveries and adventures. Both pleasant and provocative. We believe in being challenged. That’s why at DOT we work towards a mix of music, dance, visual art, physical art and inventions. We want to combine all of it, putting the full experience to the test. The DOT family is about experimenting with interiors, techniques and narratives. DOT is about new spaces. And we hope to meet you there. DOT is a collective of artists, DJs and organizers. We make techno events in its broadest sense.

Phase 1: initiate

We now have a clarity of intent. Using the parts of the statement that I outlined, let’s start a process in four parts:

1.1: “DOT is about new spaces”

Starting with a cube, representing space, we express the wordmark on a simple pixel grid, reminiscent of early computing.

1.2: “Provocative”

Compressed and simplified, the wordmark becomes increasingly distinct and illegible. It should be a little hard to decipher, but once you get it, you’ll remember it.

1.3: “Experimenting”

The wordmark is run through a series of processes involving printing and re-digitization, releasing it from the grid

1.4: “Family”

DOT is about being a safer space, where no-one should need to look over their shoulder. We incorporated a holding shape from Japanese heraldry to indicate a family crest, where everyone is welcome.

typography
Eurostile Bold Extended in all caps worked wonders when we «beta-tested» it at an event. Bombastic yet humanist, with references to early rave parties and subversive culture. It was the official typeface for the Norwegian police for a long time after all, not to mention a plethora of science fiction films.
ida nerbø am-talis the arbiter josh wink miss mostly
To subvert the only limitation of Eurostile (its massive width), we elect to break the first rule of typography school — DO NOT STRECH THE FONTS. This allows us massive freedom in choosing emphasis in layouts, such as line-ups on posters.
Colors
With implementations and printing methods spanning from computer screens to Riso machines, setting too many rules would be hard to follow. We therefore have quite lax rules about colours to begin with: Keep them limited, make good choices. Since we will be working closely with DOT going forward, we have time to experiment. In time we will no doubt see some hues that stick out and become our signature.
Thanks for watching. Be sure to let me know if you have questions, need a hand or would like to discuss a project! You can reach me at +47 41674867 or via hei@jacoblysgaard.com

Posters & Cover art

Posters & Cover art

 

Mhost Likely event series 2022

Cover art for season 01 of the music podcast Lysgaard Leverer. I have made a lot of these, but if I showed you all of them we would be here all day.

Nabovarsel posters

Nabovarsel is Bergen’s most critically acclaimed club night, spanning over a decade of quality underground electronic music. It also functions as a record label, podcast network and blog. I have been head of design for this lovable band of misfits since 2009.

The poster for our February festival is pretty special, since it includes a website and a live-stream as an integral part of the poster itself. You can see the whole thing at nabovarsel.info/live, if it’s still up there.

See the whole site & live stream

The live-stream of the festival is now a recording of course, but the weird site still lives.

Limited editions available in the shop

In addition to the “regular” event based posters, we have made some pretty super exclusive limited edition silk screened posters as well. You might wanna check those out.

A moving brand: Nabovarsel

Nabovarsel
IDENTITY
Lots of weird sketch processes with this project! Nabovarsel has a pretty complex theoretical and philosophical backbone to everything they do, so translating all this into a unified identity can be, well, daunting. Instead of simply showing you the finished product, let’s instead go through the process from the start, and look at both the good and the bad ideas. Nabovarsel is a collective of people working within electronic music and art in Bergen, Norway. Record label, music and art collective, Nabovarsel have claimed many titles over the years, but most people know us from our consistently award-winning and butt-moving club night at Landmark, which ended its 6-year stint in 2015. The first brief centred around the desire to mirror a true side of the city, as well as convey their non-conformity, counter-culture, Do-it-yourself-mentality and electronic music and art values, while at the same time feeling like an institution, something everlasting but always changing, mock-official, punk-bank-like. My first sketches ended up in this idea about merging the people, symbolised by the houses, and the city, symbolised by the mountain. Ultimately a dead end though. Let’s have a look:
The houses
The mountains
I got this idea for a pretty far out N symbol after workshopping some ideas with Erik “Teipu” Stokkmo. The N can split up, and become both the N and the V for the logotype. Begging to be animated!
Then, in a sketching session with Knut Harald Longva, this concept emerged; bulding the N shape from a disrupted circle. Which works great on a number of conceptual levels.
But despite being a lot of fun, in beta testing we quickly found out it had some problems. Including the entire wordmark inside the emblem, as well as the rather thin outer rim made legibility a problem in small sizes. Back to the drawing board:

Iteration

After some preliminary test usage, we concluded with the following changes:  
  • Consolidate the “full circle” version and the simple “N” version into a more unified form, usable in any size and media
  • Solidify the form to be more robust, as the hairline of the current version is to frail
  • Enable a more unified typography, with clear distinctions and more consistent usage rules
With this version, the N and the circle share the same width, making it sturdy as a rock. Then on to find a unified typographic style. The first version used Code bold in the logotype and Archer in additional text, neither of which really brought home the bacon. After a series of type tests and printing, I landed on Neutra as our head typeface, a classy cut that strikes just the right balance between strict and sassy. It also works beautifully in all sizes, in Demi for display heights, and Book for full paragraphs. Neutra also employs some really nifty ink traps, which come in handy when printing posters. As you can see, the N and V is also altered to adhere to the 37° cut and unify it with the emblem. (A brand update in 2015 included the use of Space Mono as a main screen-type workhorse). If you wanna see how the system looks in real life, check out the case study on all the posters I’ve made.

Thanks for watching!

Pax Tantor Typeface

Pax Tantor—An experimental typeface

This is a typeface that started as an offshoot from an unrelated project, and found life on its own. Like so many things. I tried to create something that can handle some gentle flourishes, while keeping a rigorous baseline. It’s like your grandfather; steady as a rock, but always ready with a bad joke.

It’s not really ready for public consumption just yet, but if you want to licence it, get in touch.

Thanks for watching!

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Phono festival identity

The Phono festival is one of the largest festivals in western Norway, held every year in the fall. In previous years they used to change the entire identity annually, but after my version, they decided to make my base identity permanent, and invite artists to create new posters and graphic styles for each year. This project also received gold at the Visuelt design awards.
One of my starting points was that I wished to mix together two looks – a very old school, opera ticket style, with a modern, intricate, super detailed design aesthetic. I quickly found Forum, a great typeface by Denis Masharov to solidify one end of that spectrum. With Forum as the main typeface, it’s important for the logotype and other stuff to go nuts in the opposite direction.
Then it came time to do the teaser poster, to be released months ahead of the festival itself. I started making a series of technique studies, to really nail the style I was going for. You can actually buy the originals, if you want.
Posters; the promo poster released 6 months before the festival, and the main poster showcasing the acts. These are available in the shop!
Spread from the festival programme
A part of the merchandising: Tote bags, with elements continued from the poster.
You guessed it; website.

Thanks for watching!

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