“Maple Series” T. Furnival & Sons Covered Dish
Design:
Client: T. Furnival and Sons
Date:




Add comment October 12th, 2009
Design:
Client: T. Furnival and Sons
Date:




Add comment October 12th, 2009
Design: Tam aka Okedoki
Client: Foosh
Date: 2009

1 comment October 11th, 2009
Design: Gottschalk + Ash, Fritz Gottschalk and Stuart Ash
Client: Shell
Date:

Add comment October 11th, 2009
Design: Lisa Greenberg and Trevor Schoenfeld, Superficial
Client: GeeBeauty, Toronto ON
Date: 2009




2 comments October 11th, 2009
Design: Rethink, Vancouver, Canada
Creative Director: Ian Grais, Chris Staples
Art Director/Designer: Lisa Nakamura
Date: 2009

Design for the meat counter. Inspired by the cold cuts hanging in the clients restaurant/deli, the business cards are strung in netting like the other cured meats hung in butcher shops. The remaining stationary (envelopes, letterhead, etc) are printed on the same paper that they wrap orders in, a brown manila.
A little literal, but a great concept none the less.
-Todd Falkowsky
Add comment October 11th, 2009
Design: Greg Curnoe
Client:
Date: 1980

1 comment October 10th, 2009
Designer: Wei Yew
Client: International Olympic Committee (IOC)
Date: 1993

The Olympic Truce was the result of a United Nations Resolution – signed by 184 nations – calling for a truce in all wars during a period of seven days before the opening and seven days after the closing of the Games. The Truce is a revival of the traditional moratorium on armed conflict observed during the ancient Games. For the first time in modern Olympic history, flags with this Olympic Truce symbol were flown during the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Games, and the warring factions in Sarajevo paused to observe the Truce.
Created by Canadian graphic designer Wei Yew, the Olympic Truce is symbolized by a dove of peace against the traditional Olympic flame. The festive “effervescent” confetti making up the flame suggest celebration of the human spirit of all races.
-Greg Durrell
Add comment October 9th, 2009
Design:
Client: Toronto?
Date: 2009



Cutting into what must be at least a thousand layers of paper, the guerrilla artists made a perfect little pocket for some greenery. Evidence of what was probably a nighttime adventure, is left on the concrete below.
Via the wonderful KITKA design toronto.
Add comment October 9th, 2009
Design:
Client: Crystal Castles, Ethan Kath and Alice Glass
Date: 2008

Add comment October 9th, 2009
Designer: George Emery Sr.
Manufacturer: Ecanada, Hamilton, ON
Date: 1954


1 comment October 9th, 2009
Design: Ada
Client: Cocopunkz
Date: 2009


1 comment October 9th, 2009
Design:
Client
Date: 1976

- filed under “Not Canadian” –
Add comment October 9th, 2009