Rockport Publishers is pleased to work in collaboration with the Clio Awards -- who grant the "Oscars" of the advertising industry -- to publish the 42nd annual Clio Awards. The Clio Awards has been recognizing the best advertising design worldwide for 42 years. A jury of top advertising and design industry professionals culls the more than 18,000 entries, and awards the top one percent with gold, silver, and bronze citations. A handful of work is also recognized for honorable merit. Each winner is presented in these pages, in full-color with detailed design credits, making this book the ultimate resource and reference for the design and advertising industry. This book also provides an inspirational collection of top work for students of advertising and design and for seasoned professionals in the design community. Book jacket.
The towns of Camden and Rockport have had a rich, intertwined history since the first settlements in the mid-1700s. Until 1891, they were one town, built on the abundant natural resources of coastal Maine. Many residents in the early 19th century were farmers that carved out a living from the soil, or fishermen that harvested the teeming waters of Penobscot Bay. As the towns grew, successful industries were established that sustained the communities through the mid-20th century. These included fishing, textile mills, lime manufacturing, an anchor factory, and shipbuilding. Majestic schooners were built in the shipyards, and businesses such as the Bay View House hotel, S.B. Haskell's clothing store, numerous livery stables and harness shops, Joseph Brewster's Shirt Manufactory, and Knowlton Brothers Foundry lined the main thoroughfares. In Rockport, the Shepherd Company supplied lime, and the Rockport Ice Company cut ice on Lily Pond to be shipped as far as the Caribbean. These tight-knit villages, nestled "where the mountains meet the sea," weathered fires and wars, celebrated the launches of massive sailing vessels, and welcomed summer "rusticators" who helped form a lasting legacy of arts, culture, and learning that continues to draw visitors today.
From the renaissance of historic homes, libraries, and commercial spaces, to large, long-term, complex projects such as the renovation of the Michigan or Texas state capitols, this book presents the state of the architectural profession as it relates to historic preservation, and attests that preservation architecture is both exciting and important. Careful renovation, restoration, and preservation enhance not only the buildings themselves, but the neighborhoods and communities that surround them by ensuring a secure future for these architecturally significant emblems of the past.
A must-have collection for the thousands of designers who depend on brochures us their "bread-and-butter" work. This full-color collection contains hundreds of creative ideas for designing fresh and effective brochures. In these outstanding examples, designers will find dynamic covers, eye-catching pages, and lots of powerful ways to pull together paper, graphics and text into great pieces. -- contains more than 600 persuasive, full-color designs -- in styles from the classic to the funky -- features brochures designed for a wide range of small businesses and large corporations, products and services -- hundreds of ideas for creative uses of paper, folds, die cuts, typography, photography and illustration
Rockport Publishers is pleased to work in collaboration with the Clio Awards -- who grant the "Oscars" of the advertising industry -- to publish the 42nd annual Clio Awards. The Clio Awards has been recognizing the best advertising design worldwide for 42 years. A jury of top advertising and design industry professionals culls the more than 18,000 entries, and awards the top one percent with gold, silver, and bronze citations. A handful of work is also recognized for honorable merit. Each winner is presented in these pages, in full-color with detailed design credits, making this book the ultimate resource and reference for the design and advertising industry. This book also provides an inspirational collection of top work for students of advertising and design and for seasoned professionals in the design community. Book jacket.
From the renaissance of historic homes, libraries, and commercial spaces, to large, long-term, complex projects such as the renovation of the Michigan or Texas state capitols, this book presents the state of the architectural profession as it relates to historic preservation, and attests that preservation architecture is both exciting and important. Careful renovation, restoration, and preservation enhance not only the buildings themselves, but the neighborhoods and communities that surround them by ensuring a secure future for these architecturally significant emblems of the past.
Created for the gallery craftsperson, this collection shows the best in small-scale crafts sold through the thousands of craft galleries around the world. It includes crafts like ceramics, textiles, glass, jewellery, metal and wood.
Fresh work, new design firms, established design gurus, and more than 300 innovative letterhead and logo designs. This volume is a terrific, creative addition to the very popular series.
A business card is more than a piece of paper with your name on it. It'Dts your calling card; a snapshot of your brand identity, a constant reminder in your client'Dts Rolodexes. Perhaps that'Dts why Rockport'Dts Best of Business Card Design Series is so eagerly anticipated year after year. Now, Rockport brings together the very best examples of innovative, stand-out designs from three of its annual volumes. In The Best of the Best of Business Card Design, readers will find hundreds of unique and memorable designs for every type of client, and in a broad range of colors, styles, and shapes. Filled with inspiration for designers and their clients around the world, this creative resource shows how any individual or business can make a tiny space speak volumes about who they are, and what they do.
The towns of Camden and Rockport have had a rich, intertwined history since the first settlements in the mid-1700s. Until 1891, they were one town, built on the abundant natural resources of coastal Maine. Many residents in the early 19th century were farmers that carved out a living from the soil, or fishermen that harvested the teeming waters of Penobscot Bay. As the towns grew, successful industries were established that sustained the communities through the mid-20th century. These included fishing, textile mills, lime manufacturing, an anchor factory, and shipbuilding. Majestic schooners were built in the shipyards, and businesses such as the Bay View House hotel, S.B. Haskell's clothing store, numerous livery stables and harness shops, Joseph Brewster's Shirt Manufactory, and Knowlton Brothers Foundry lined the main thoroughfares. In Rockport, the Shepherd Company supplied lime, and the Rockport Ice Company cut ice on Lily Pond to be shipped as far as the Caribbean. These tight-knit villages, nestled "where the mountains meet the sea," weathered fires and wars, celebrated the launches of massive sailing vessels, and welcomed summer "rusticators" who helped form a lasting legacy of arts, culture, and learning that continues to draw visitors today.
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