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  • Brand + Creative Direction
  • Writing
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Brooke Ginnard

  • Product Design + Strategy
  • Brand + Creative Direction
  • Writing
  • About

Vacation rush

I recently returned to work after spending two wonderful weeks in Italy and France. I ate to my heart's content, swam in the Mediterranean, read three books, and drank a lot of wine. But to get to that state of relaxation, I had to frantically work ahead before I left. 

Thankfully someone took over layout and art request duties during my absence, but I didn't want to leave without putting together two covers that would run during my absence.

The first cover (which ran second) was for a story about defining the brogrammer and exploring diversity in tech. Since the article's concept was still developing, I wanted to come up with a cover image that was on-point, but still universal enough to capture the changing direction of the piece. 

Hence: the cloud heads. The cloud-head concept works in three ways: 
1. Most tech workers literally work in the cloud. 
2. Brogrammers have their "heads in the clouds" and are out of touch with most peoples' realities of life in San Francisco.
3. The vast majority of tech workers are white males.

I put the cloud heads in front of a mechanical-looking SF skyline. (Thank you, Photoshop filters.) I think I nailed it.

01-Cover_techbro.jpg

This next cover, which ran the first week I was gone, was for a replacement story that I ended up putting together at the very last minute. 

We originally planned to run a feature on SF General hospital that week, and I had commissioned a beautiful illustration for the cover far in advance. However, the writer determined that she needed more time for the piece, so it was shelved in favor of a story on Recology's shady practices. (The SF General cover hits stands tomorrow, so stay tuned!)

The Recology story was originally pitched as being purely about compost, and I decided this would be a good opportunity to write on a banana — a growing desire produced by Jason Polan's Instagram feed.

When the piece became more elaborate, I incorporated all waste bins — compost, recycling and garbage — in a background resembling the look of an online game, in order to fit with the story's updated headline.

tags: SF Bay Guardian, cover, collage, banana, Photoshop, tech, Jason Polan
Tuesday 07.29.14
Posted by Brooke Ginnard
 

Future of tech in transit

Ever since the SF Bay Guardian's graphic feature on Aaron Swartz, I've been wanting to do an illustrative series about San Francisco life. Our streets issue presented the perfect medium.

I had to wrestle with the writer a bit to keep these concepts relevant to San Francisco life, instead of this feature purely being an excuse to put "Star Wars" and "Back to the Future" references in the paper. The final result, I hope, paints a humorous picture of a dystopian San Francisco that is somewhat foreseeable ... with "Star Wars" and "Back to the Future" references. Bonus! 

Illustrated by the wonderful Matthew Smith.

tags: illustration, art direction, Matthew Smith, tech, SF Bay Guardian, Star Wars, Back to the Future, streets
Thursday 06.12.14
Posted by Brooke Ginnard
 

Good tech

The SF Bay Guardian's Good Tech cover story was finally published today! We had first planned to print the issue in July 2013 (and I even commissioned this fantastic cover illustration by Matthew Fleming in late June) ... but that launch was hijacked by other, more timely stories, and by the abrupt departure of longtime SF Bay Guardian publisher Tim Redmond (now writing at 48 hills), who first envisioned the issue.

But I'm really happy the concept made a comeback, and the timing couldn't be more perfect.

In recent months, the tech industry has consistently been the scapegoat for San Francisco's changing neighborhoods and housing crisis, and the words "Google bus" are prone to incite a deluge of techie hate. Now more than ever, it's important to highlight the socially conscious tech workers, and the ways tech can aid government and solve real problems. All-encompassing anti-techie prejudice can hurt the city, because like all of us, geeks have the power to change the world. Let's get together, combine our resources and change it for the better.

Check out all five Good Tech articles at sfbg.com.

Illustration by Matthew Fleming

Illustration by Matthew Fleming

tags: Matthew Fleming, illustration, SF Bay Guardian, cover, tech, art direction
Wednesday 01.22.14
Posted by Brooke Ginnard
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