Showing posts with label Luci Everett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luci Everett. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Official opening party: Fri 12 March from 7-11pm at 1000 £ Bend






Special thanks to Luci Everett for her wonderful graphic design work.



Sunday, February 28, 2010

Amy Borrell



Amy Borrell is a freelance graphic designer, photographer and illustrator for Mambo, Frankie Magazine and Darren Hanlon. She is the founder of Bakers Dozen, and runs a collaborative blog with Luci Everett (who designed the identity for Insert Coin Here) entitled We Make Words.

Her work was recently included in The Photo Album, published in 2009 by Frankie Magazine.



Award Ribbon Brooches, 2010, felt, paper, brooch pin

Sweet and petit award ribbon brooches, made from handcut paper and felt, in happy splashes of colour. Intended for wear on days that need a little brightening.




Monday, February 8, 2010

Our logo!



So about that 'special something' mentioned in the post below, it's the logo for Insert Coin Here as designed by Luci Everett. If Luci's work seems familiar, it's because this lovely lady has also done design work for Alice Euphemia as well as several record covers and posters for singer Georgia Fields. Thank you very much Luci!

The logo is enjoying a super large presence as our new header. Have you seen it? You can't miss it... it's pretty big.

Only 3 weeks left to the launch of the exhibition, location details to follow soon!





Some images from the creation process



For more on Luci, please check out her website and blog!



http://www.lucieverett.com/

http://www.happinessetc.blogspot.com/



Photography: Luci Everett

About




Insert Coin Here

is a group exhibition curated by Nella Themelios & Kim Brockett. The exhibition is part of the 2010 L'Oreal Melbourne Fashion Festival cultural program.


Insert Coin Here
comprises of two vending machines strategically placed in public spaces around the Melbourne CBD. Containing limited edition 'fashion objects' produced by over 60 Melbourne-based artists, the vending machines are activated when a member of the public inserts a $2 coin. The exhibition explores alternative interfaces of exchange for fashion, the mechanised system as a form of 'fashion dialogue'. More broadly, it thinks through discourses around public space and the role that fashion might play in it.



1 - 31 March 2010



Insert Coin Here is proudly supported by:


Photobucket