Claes Pettersson has added a photo to the pool:

G-Print. Impossible to copy.
Since 1975.
1975. Bell-bottoms, disco, seaweed wallpaper in shades of brown, hair, a lot of hair, afros on every- body and voluptuous sideburns, roller-skates, Led Zeppelin. Coffee and oil is very expensive. The first disposable razor. Ali beats Frazier in the “Thrilla in Manilla”, The King is alive and kicking in Vegas and the king of Sweden is yet to be married. Gerald Ford is president in the USA, Brezhnev in the USSR. It’s the year when General Franco dies and Angelina Jolie and Tiger Woods are born.
Despite an oil crisis and prolonged recession, 1975 was a carefree time with more solutions than problems. A dualistic era where the colourful visions from the 60’s still lived but popular culture interpreted those visions in darker Kodachromatic tones. It was decency and decadence. It was the birth of the peace- and environmentalist movements, amidst a full-blown cold war.
Also, in 1975 a new paper is born – G-Print.
Since then, for 35 years, G-Print’s been loved for its overall quality and consistency by merchants and printers alike. And most importantly there’s been no significant changes in paper properties over all those years. This equals 35 years of perfection for a paper and a paper production process that is, “Impossible to copy”.
In this boxed DM, distributed to 20.000 paper clients all over Europe, Arctic Paper, the owner of G-Print, push the “Impossible to copy” message via an anachronistic box including mini examples of paper applications. A mini DM, a mini cookbook, a mini Magazine and a mini Poster and Map. All showcasing classics from 1975. Not very incidentally, just like G-Print.
bagelin has added a photo to the pool:

www.cybernetikz.com has added a photo to the pool:

Logo Design for an iPad Application.
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www.cybernetikz.com
Web development and iPhone Application
Email: sales@cybernetikz.com
Cell: +1-347-261-2888
Gtalk: cybernetikz
Skype: cybernetikz
NY-11372, USA.
A2ZMpls has added a photo to the pool:

Found this today at an antique store, and googled the name when we got home – he is still working and has a shop in Sandes, Norway. Can’t wait to visit it next time we’re there!
The bottom sticker has his name and: Keramisk verksted (ceramic workshop), Stavanger, Norway
Blogged.
Mika Lehtinen has added a photo to the pool:

I´ve been lazy and I haven´t even developed my first roll..
Sauli.S has added a photo to the pool:


Hans Bendiksen from Oslo has sent us the link to really big gallery of all the Norwegian FASHION designers: www.lookbook.no
Claes Pettersson has added a photo to the pool:

Logo for Swedish publishinghouse Kabusa.
Kabusa Books is one of Sweden’s largest publishers. Kabusa is also is a place in southern Sweden as well as the world’s most beautiful shooting range, where the publishing house was born in the early 2000s. Kabusa Books publishes both Swedish fiction as well as translated fiction for adults and children, detective stories, fiction and gift books. Within the publishing group is also Styxx Fantasy and Charlie by Kabusa.
This is their new profile.
We wanted the logo to communicate and get people thinking. We wanted people to get that little cerebral micro award when the finally get it – when they too see the bookshelf with the tilting books. Also, use those slashes/tilting books in other media, such as web, i.e. always make the url meaningful and searchable. For example www.kabusabocker.se/designprogram
And what about that venomous green colour? Well, it’s chosen stand out in a crowd and promote an inquisitive attitude without being to screechy & culture douchy. It’s intentionally synthetic, invitational. Perky kiwi, not gray green banana
Claes Pettersson has added a photo to the pool:

Part of an identity program for Swedish publishinghouse Kabusa Books.
Claes Pettersson has added a photo to the pool:

Part of an identity program for Swedish publishinghouse Kabusa Books.