Rizco Design

Charity:Water with Mohawk Fine Papers

waterAlmost a billion people on the planet don’t have access to clean drinking water. That’s one in eight of us. charity: water is a non-profit organization bringing clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations. 100% of public donations directly fund water projects.

Mohawk Fine Papers was one of the many amazing sponsors of last night’s, charity: water 2009 Charity: Ball, where 1,200 people gathered at the Metropolitan Pavilion in NYC with host, Adrian Grenier, to raise funds to provide clean drinking water to villages within Uganda, Sierra Leone and Ethiopia. One of many highlights is the “Water Catwalk” where attendees were encourage to walk 52 feet carrying two jerry cans that weight 40 pounds each. Africans walk 300 times that distance daily (3 miles) to gather enough water for cooking, cleaning and drinking. Time spent on this daily task would prevent you from earning an income or getting an education. If you are a woman, it puts you at greater risk of rape and assault.

… So yes, I joined my Mohawk rep, Cindy Salant, in handing over our drinks, shoes and handbags, and walking barefoot in our semi-formal dresses – a minimal effort in comparison to the journey that Africans make. Our reward was to learn and experience how fortunate we are to have clean drinking water.

High compliments to Viktoria Alexeeva Harrison, Director of Design & Branding, for the incredible visual displays and to Founder, Scott Harrison for turning big ideas into actions that touch so many lives … and for being so humble along the way.

For more information and to donate visit www.charitywater.org.

Why Don’t More Firms Use GOE?

A contributing factor is its absence from industry standard layout applications.
By Hal Hinderliter — Graphic Arts Online, November 1, 2009

Pantone GOEPantone Goe SystemDesigners often describe their work as “innovative concepts” that can “push the envelope,” so breaking with tradition should be instinctual. This makes it surprising that ad agencies and design studios have failed to embrace Pantone’s GOE color specification system.

Introduced in September 2007, GOE offers an expanded gamut of 2,058 spot colors (up from 1,114 colors in the previous PMS system) in a redesigned swatchbook, organized by a new numbering system. Press operators will appreciate that all GOE colors are coating-friendly, and the entire color range is formulated to print uniform ink film thickness. With more colors presented in a more logical sequence, this 21st-century replacement for the 46-year-old Pantone Matching System is a “no-brainer” that has turned out to be a non-starter.

“I have not had one customer ask for it,” explains Raphael Horvath, owner of commercial printer Action Graphics. “A good portion of our client base is very specific about their brand appearance, and they always use the Pantone Matching System.”

Resistance to change may be part of the problem, but a contributing factor is the absence of GOE within industry-standard layout applications. Fortunately, the Pantone website offers a free installer that will insert GOE swatchbooks into either current or older versions of Adobe Creative Suite as well as QuarkXPress 7 and 8. Printed fan GOEGuides (on coated or uncoated stocks) and GOEBridge guides (for spot-to-process conversions) can be purchased online for $99 each, or users can opt for the GOE System package that contains a swatchbook, GOESticks adhesive-backed reusable color chips and a CD containing the GOE digital libraries for both QuarkXPress and the Adobe Creative Suite.

“We’re committed to making GOE work,” says Andy Hatkoff, Pantone VP OEM and technology licensing. “But we didn’t discontinue PMS; the two continue to live in a concurrent universe.” Hatkoff knows unseating a product with the longevity of PMS will not occur overnight. “It’s like pushing a big rock up a hill,” he admits, “but we’ve done the right things, technically speaking. Now, it’s about helping people understand GOE’s many advantages.”

As this nascent color system attains wider adoption, ink vendors will be required to support both the classic PMS formulations, as well as the new GOE inks. Fortunately, that job is made easy by GOE’s smaller base set: only 10 inks (plus clear) are required, versus 16 base colors used for PMS inks. Pantone also improved the stability of its new offering by eliminating the use of Reflex Blue (incompatible with coatings, subject to bronzing) and Rhodamine Red (tends to burn out quickly). These attributes make GOE attractive to ink vendors, who welcome a transition to this modern ink set.

One designer who favors GOE is Debra Rizzi, partner at RizCo Design. “It’s more streamlined, its smarter,” says Rizzi. “I’m constantly trying to find a different palette to work with that is fresh, so the fact that it’s organized better definitely helps.”

Rizzi is implementing GOE on a number of projects, including a 100+ page manual to celebrate the UN’s International World Water Week. “For eco-conscious clients, the elimination of Rhodamine Red and Reflex Blue is a big plus,” she says.

This new color specification system’s benefits are substantial, but as yet print providers have failed to encourage clients to abandon PMS books. Pantone may feel that the time for change has come, but apparently the designers will have to GOE first.

Posted By Debra Rizzi

Green Design Firm, Rizco Design, Spotlighted In eBook

GGG

“Graphics Gone Green: Ways to Go Green Without Losing Your Shirt” is an eBook and Print-on-Demand Book for Creative Professionals

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A New Lobby for CAIT

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We recently had the privilege to develop and design environmental graphics for the Center for Advanced Infrastructure and Trasnportation at Rutgers University.

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The Big Book of Green Design

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Rutgers CAIT Lobby Design & Installation

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Rizco Design recently designed and developed environmental graphics for the Rutgers Center for Advanced Infrastructure and Transportation (CAIT) building. CAIT addresses complex problems of transportation and infrastructure within high-volume multimodal environments, conducting research that focuses on the systems that keep our country mobile and prosperous.

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