Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Top Ten Things Not To Do When Naming Your Business

As P*S* regulars will know, I often criticize the names of businesses and products just as much as the designs they employ. So I thought I’d offer up a list of the top ten naming pitfalls businesses should avoid.


10. Punny Business
I realize this is coming from a guy who named his blog Pr*tty Sh*tty, but that’s why this sits at number ten. Sometimes it’s ok to use a pun, but it shouldn’t come at the expense of the reputation or image a business might be trying to build. Salons seem to like puns a lot, who knows why. But Funeral homes are perhaps not well served by this device, even if it’s a family name.


9. Placing the Name
There are countless small businesses that name themselves after the street they’re on, or the neighborhood they’re in. It’s not such a bad idea, except when you move across town. One of my favorite architecture firms is called Leroy Street Studio... they’re on Hester Street, of course.


8. Name Diarrhea
Speaking of architecture firms, even great ones (like the example above) can go a bit overboard with the list of names. Law firms are most guilty of this, I suspect. I get it. You want, or need, to recognize all the partners. But let’s face it, in everyday usage, no one is getting past the first or second name when mentioning your business. So the third, fourth and fifth guys/gals might as well not be there anyway.


7. Thy Neighbor’s Name
It’s a pretty cheap and lazy tactic to steal or imitate the name of another business in order to get some collateral recognition. The countless Ray’s Pizzas in NYC are a great example of how bad this can get. But the other example shown above is one of my favorites: a restaurant one block from the NY Times Building, that even had the gall to use the Times logotype on their canopy, which as you can see they were made to patch over.


6. Dead On Arrival
Let me be clear about this: Heaven is a place you go when you’re F*CKING DEAD! Ergo, you sell dead sh*t. And no, I’m not buying the argument that Burger Heaven is where burger lovers go when they pass on. You’re telling me regular heaven doesn’t have good burgers? Puhlease!


5. Kool Namez
It’s not possible to trademark or register a word from common daily usage, so businesses often change up a word by spelling it with a Z or a K or whatever. It makes sense, but it smacks of trying to be clever, and I still mostly hate it.


4. Xtracted E
Similar to number 5, but in a category of obnoxiousness all its own, is the use of an X in place of an Ex. This became especially prevalent during the rise of extreme sports, and is still a pretty surefire signal that whatever it is, it’s closer to Xcrement than Xtreme.


3. N ‘n’ R Us
Continuing in that vein, businesses often replace an And with an N. It’s not cute. It’s just tired. But even more tired is the poor dead horse that is R Us. The toy store guys own that, so let it go already.


2. Stuff & Things
That Linens-n-Things image for number 3 hits on another of my naming pet peeves. Either decide what you’re selling, or go do something else. Don’t cover your what-might-I-sell-in-the-future ass by tacking on a lazy, catch-all modifier. Did you know Linens-n-Things also sold solid gold anal beads? Right next to the shower curtain rings and novelty plungers. Kinky!


1. Is That a Name in Your Pocket?
Man alive, can I segue or what! Seriously, do I even need to say anything else?

By the way, Lucky Wang is a kids’ clothing store... you can’t make this stuff up.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

V and O




Pr*tty
Publication design is pretty foreign territory for me as a designer. And I don’t really read magazines, so I guess that’s why you don’t see many here. But V Magazine’s approach to the use of their logo on the cover is praiseworthy for its bold scale and crisp geometry. Especially when it points right at the hooha.

Sh*tty
This is the epitome of pretty much every cliché about tacky magazine cover design. Also, seriously Oprah, I can see putting yourself on the cover for the first year or two, but it’s been a f*cking decade! Let it go already! Give someone else a turn, you selfish brat.

What am I saying?! I must be nuts. Love you, O! Please don’t send your flying monkeys to kill or maim me.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Cabbage and Baby Arugula





Pr*tty
If you’re a cabbage, you get an awesome illustration of yourself on your box. And Robert De Niro does an awesome impersonation of you.

Sh*tty
If you’re baby arugula, you get a crappy drawing of a... cupcake?

Friday, June 25, 2010

Scenic Drive Seagull and Barracuda Networks




Pr*tty
One of my favorite parts about my trip to San Francisco last month was the Scenic Drive signs. I just want to feed that seagull little cartoon fish until he follows me home.

Sh*tty
This is one cartoon fish I would never feed to an adorable cartoon seagull. I wouldn’t even feed this fugly piece of garbage to my worse frenemy. Speaking of which, the position of my worse frenemy is still available. I’ll be taking applications in the form of bullying tweets and vicious comments on my Facebook status.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Neri's Bakery Products and Fischer Foods of New York




Pr*tty
Hey there Mr. Mustache. Any interest in being my new favorite uncle?

Sh*tty
Don’t feel left out Li’l Sprinter. You can be my new favorite thing I wish I never had to see again.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Wednesday Waffler: Dime Store




I took the Alicia Keys photo ages ago, thinking the unusual typeface was Pr*tty. But the more I saw it sitting and waiting in my photo library, the more I began to question my judgement. Then, just a couple days ago, the typeface was featured on the front page of MyFonts and I suddenly had a tangible product at which to target my indecision: Dime Store. (link over to see the whole font)

For the most part I still quite enjoy most of the letterforms, but certain others don’t seem to work. The S’s, for example, feel incomplete. And the upper halves of the B and R sit awkwardly atop their lower halves. The lowercase h and n are not right either. So I have to wonder if the designer didn’t do enough to create a true family here.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Levi's and Miracle Whip commercials







Pr*tty
There’s been plenty of coverage about this campaign already (mostly about the iteration with the gay dudes—homos are still controversial, go figure), but I think it can’t be overstated how much cooler Levi’s look in this context. More importantly, it feels stylish, youthful and smart, without being labored or dishonest.

Sh*tty
So Miracle Whip is the secret ingredient that makes badass biker picnics badass? All this time I thought it was the gingham blankets and ambrosia salad.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Latin CT and Brush Script redux







Pr*tty
The first installment of this pairing dates back quite a bit. And I wouldn’t repeat myself, except that I still think Latin CT looks awesome. Even Frank Chimero likes it, and he’s awesome, too.

Sh*tty
More important than Latin CT looking awesome, is how un-awesome Brush Script is—not only in its heinous design but in its nauseating pervasiveness. Seriously, it took me all of 10 minutes walking around the city to collect these examples. Comic Sans and Papyrus (combined!) don’t even come close to being as alarmingly ubiquitous and inappropriately used.

It must be stopped. Someone start a blog, quick!

Friday, June 18, 2010

Alley Jams and Maloof Money Cup




Pr*tty
I took this photo so long ago I had almost forgotten about it. But I’m glad it caught my eye when I was scrolling thru my stockpile of blog fodder, because it’s quite a handsome thing, and communicates clearly what it needs to. It also conveys an effortless, restrained amount of cool appropriate to the event.

Sh*tty
I had no idea InDesign Quark had a feature that was the equivalent of throwing a pile of random junk in the air and letting it land where it may. But clearly that feature exists. How else can we explain this flotsam-fest? Ah yes, there it is, in the Item menu > Obliterate Hierarchy. There must also be a Preference that makes things patently uncool.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

InVite and Vitamin Shoppe




Pr*tty
My perception of “health” and vitamin stores is that they’re pretty cheesy and disingenuous in their offering. This simple, handsome logo actually goes a long way in changing that perception. Dare I say it sort of reminds me of the brilliant Victoria and Albert Museum logo?

Sh*tty
This one, on the other hand, convinces me that my perception is all too justified. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if vitamin pills were actually made of grade school paste and shredded copies of Parade magazine.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Wednesday Waffler: 'wichcraft



There’s no question that this sandwich-oriented wing of Tom Collichio’s Craft empire has a clever name. There’s no doubt the colors are nice. And there’s no doubt this is a lovely typeface (pretty sure it’s a version of Century but I can’t quite pinpoint which one).

But I can’t help but find fault with the missing i dot, the oddly extended serif on the h (particular to this lockup it seems), and the too-clever-for-its-own-good, flipped-over t in place of the f.



Thanks to my pal Katie Kosma for suggesting today’s waffler.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Muscle Milk and SlimShots



Pr*tty
Do I love this? No. The background swooshes are not my sort of thing. But the ad is simply designed and focused on its message. And you know I like that.

Sh*tty
Let me get this straight. Drinking this crap makes you lose weight... apparently by killing you and leaving your cartoonish ghostly shell behind to haunt the subway. Or you can just let the trauma of seeing this supress your appetite... until you die and turn into a ghost of course.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Popchips and Munchies




Pr*tty
Dropping out the i is a bit much, but the typography and overall look here is unexpected and truly different than everything it’s surrounded by on the shelf. Also, they taste pretty good.

Sh*tty
Each of the logos across the top is worthy of its own blog post, but the product logo is my primary target. I get it... they’re called Munchies Cheese Fix: a thinly veiled nod to an audience of hungry potheads. But in that case that typeface should be less ugly and childish, and more wacky and psychedelic. In fact, maybe the shelving unit should have a black light installed just for these.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Animated clay and animated painting











Pr*tty
These somewhat recent commercials demonstrate the enduring appeal of claymation. The puppets are well designed and well animated, which adds a tangible degree of credibility to each ad’s message.

Sh*tty
There’s no particular reason stop-motion animated painting needs to be awful. But these commercials aren’t exactly selling me on the technique.

The Blue Moon ad is well-executed, but the concept is so goofy and the painting so tacky you can’t help but question how artfully crafted the product really is.

As for the Zegerid ad... Amidst the thousands of terrible commercials on TV, I thought I knew the limit of those that boggle the mind with their nauseating repugnance. How little I knew.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Amtrak and Flu Prevention commercials







Pr*tty
These kids can act.

Sh*tty
These cannot.

That’s right. I’m picking on kids. What? They’re asking for it!

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Happy Pappy



I haven’t indulged much in personal announcements or divulgences here at Pr*tty Sh*tty. Today I’m making an exception, because I thought you guys might like to know that the wife and I are expecting our second child and I finally have a halfway decent sonogram image to share (she’s been quite good at hiding from the ultrasound until now). So yeah, I’m all brimming over with the fatherly pride and joy and whatnot.

That means in late October, if the blog goes quiet for awhile you’ll know my newest Itty Bitty Pretty is here. But don’t worry dear readers, I’ve got my priorities straight. I won’t let parenting duties keep me from my blogging obligation for too long. A day or two at most.