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DESIGN N THINGS.
 September/October.
 32



 using its own his-  it was a bold move. At the time New York   JL: What else did you look at in the research   go with the journey and see where we land.
 What's   tory. The editorial   was just another city magazine. The covers   phase?  JL: Moss is a visual person. Is that rare among
 would  be  like ‘Cheap  Hamptons getaways’,
 and  design  ideas
                                                                                     editors?
                                                    CD:  Early  US  Esquire  featured  in  our  re-
 developed
 The   it still  reverberate   ‘Weekends  upstate’,  things  like  that. Then  I   search for the covers; for general design it   CD: He’s one of the more visual editors. He
 heard he’d hired Jody Quon as photo edi-
                                                    was a mix of things, including Mark Porter’s
 through the mag-
 tor, whom I’d worked with at The New York
 Big   azine  world,  not   Times Magazine. I’d worked with Adam, too,   then new Guardian redesign. It made great   would develop a story but unless there was
                                                                                     a visual solution that brought it life it would
                                                    use of graphics, the front page combined
 he was the editor when I was there. And then
 least in the new
 Idea  Vanity Fair.  he hired Luke Hayman as design director. I   great news photography with silhouetted   be dropped. He saw it as a 50-50 relationship.
                                                                                     He understood design would skew the story
                                                    entertainment images. We looked at classic
 by Leah Collins  With   Hay-  knew Luke socially, and he’d interviewed me   sources of infographics like Edward Tufte, but   a certain way. He would say we have a ten-
 man’s 2007 de-  when he was at Brill’s Content. I emailed him                       page story on some topic and we would do
 parture for Pen-  asking if he needed a deputy. We talked a few   Adam loved Spy magazine.  a design system for it and he would say this
 tagram,  Dixon  times, then I met with Adam, and I started   Spy subverted the language of infograph-  looks too dry and essay-ish, it should be fun
 In terms of inspiration, Dixon   became design   soon after. Luke had been there two weeks
 doesn't exclusively look to                        ics;  they  were  satirical  infographics.  Their   and have energy. So we would change the
 other magazines, though he   director.   Edi-  and Adam about four.  tone matched what we wanted, our content   whole mood. Other times we might start out
 mentions UK titles including   tor and design      wasn’t serious, we weren’t doing weather   crazy and fun, with lots of colours and design,
 men's magazines Port and   director  were  JL:  That  was  an  impressive  team,  built  to
 British Esquire. "I still think   carry out what turned out to be one of the   graphs. The claim has always been that Spy   and he would say, no no, these are our best
 New York magazine is doing   content to man-  most significant redesign projects of the past   invented the floating head, the cutout head   writers, we need a bookish feel.
 really great work — even   age  a  smooth   decade. How did you go about achieving that   floating on a chart. We embraced that a lot,
 without me," he jokes. "I just   transition. ‘If  you   especially for the Intelligencer section.  JL:  Any magazine is about team work; at
 sort of look everywhere," he   on a weekly magazine?                                Adbusters you and Kalle Lasn were a team.
 says: websites, films, book   have  to  redesign   CD:  We’d  split  our  time  half  and  half  be-  On a weekly basis the new magazine had a   But on New York there was a different scale
 jackets, catalogues. "On the   a magazine again
 cover we do a lot of little   after three years   tween the magazine we had to put out that   really good flow to it, it didn’t feel too broken   of teamwork. How many people were you
 detailing like little buttons.   you really did a   week  and  doing  redesign  explorations. We   up, with some features really designed and   working with day to day?
 A lot of that stuff gets   were finishing the magazine each week and   others not. We just wanted it to flow as one
 pulled from some old little   bad job in the       great experience.                CD:  There  was  Luke,  me,  Randy  Minor
 matchbook that we found or   first  place,’  Moss   also having separate meetings to discuss the   (who’s still there now) and Kate Elazegui …
 some signage in Paris that we   says.  Dixon  kept   change with Adam and the editorial team   JL: You described the redesign as an intense   I guess a total of seven in the design dept.
 Xeroxed."  he’d brought in.  All the sections had new
 the  ethos of  the                                 process but producing weekly issues to that   Another six or seven in the photo dept. Then
 original  redesign   names, so they were throwing up ideas for   degree  of  detail  and  finish  must  also  have   the production dept. About fifteen in terms
 but developed it,   those sections.                been very intense.               of photography and design.
 bringing in new collaborators and producing   We  brought  in  two  freelance  designers   CD: It was, but Adam’s passion for the maga-  JL: In a non-US context that seems a huge
 some of the most memorable images of its   whom we briefed on types of articles and   zine and the city was the driving force. He has   team to work with or even to see.
 9/11 era.  our visual ideas and we all just prototyped for   no end to ways of talking and writing about
 One reference point for the redesign of   two or three months.  New York City. Every week there was some-  CD: There was a lot to do. We were each re-
 New York had been the 1980s satirical mag-         thing new to get caught up in and make you   sponsible for a section or feature; we would
 azine Spy, which specialised in the use of dia-  We  rolled  the  redesign  out  a  different   excited. The content was so good, the writers   design it, flow in all the text, style the text,
 grams, cutouts and other visual devices. Vanity   section every month, starting with ‘The Strat-  and photographers we were working with so   and tweak it till it was done, approved, then
 Fair editor Graydon Carter had been one of   egist’,  a  whole  new  section  editorially  and   talented, we could just feel the quality getting   we would turn it over to production who’d
 visually. Meanwhile the rest of the magazine
 Spy’s founders, which makes Dixon’s arrival at   remained the same, with maybe a few little   higher and higher and nobody really wanting   sort pre-press and proofs. We did the hi-res
 Vanity Fair and his introduction of a more de-  tweaks. Then [we did] the Culture pages, then   to let anyone down on any aspect of it. So   files. Friday mornings we’d get a giant stack of
 tailed design approach and increased use of        you live with the last-minute changes and the   Kodak proofs. It printed Friday evening and
 infographics and devices seem a natural step.  the rest of the magazine. It was a very intense,   late nights. We just had to hunker down for   would be on sale Saturday afternoon.
 ‘There  is  an  elegance  and  sophistication   exciting and hectic time. There were many,   that first year, if not first two years. Looking   JL: The role of Jody Quon seems very import-
 to Chris’s work that sets him apart in the   many late nights, working until two, three in   back I don’t know that I could do it again.  ant to a lot of people here.
 the morning every week.
 design world,’ Carter says. With stage one of
 the redesign completed, and the design tools   JL:  Adam Moss clearly had strong ideas   JL: Some designers get frustrated by process   CD: Definitely. It is all teamwork but she was
 in place, it is fascinating to watch Dixon and   about what he wanted to do with the mag-  and timing. You always seem very calm.  hugely important to the magazine. She guided
 Carter make the most of a design that at last   azine visually.  CD: People have always said I’m calm, and   all the photographers and their photographs.
 matches  the  scope  and  glamour  of Vanity   CD: He had a very clear perspective on the   appreciated that in the middle of certain situ-  That crossed everything from still life shoots
 Fair’s content.  project. Growing up in New York City in the   ations. I work well with slightly crazier people,   and food to architecture and portraiture, we
 Jeremy Leslie talks to Chris Dix-  1970s-80s his bible had been New York. He   I balance them out. I like seeing how things   shot everything. We worked really well to-
                                                                                     gether when I was producing all the covers.
 on  wanted to take it back to those great roots.   can get better, not fighting things for the sake   She had her perspective on design and I had
 Jeremy Leslie: How did you come to join   A  lot  of  the  page  architecture  came  from   of fighting them but listening to things that   mine on pictures. A great collaboration.
                                                    people suggest. You reach a point where you
 that original New York magazine, the 1968
 the New York magazine redesign project?  version. The  whole  front  of  the  book,  the   realise you’re not always right, in fact, there re-  JL: Many of your colleagues would have stud-
 Chris  Dixon:  I  remember  reading  some-  Egyptian typeface, the rules. It also gave us a   ally is no right or wrong, you just keep trying   ied design straight from school while you
 where that Adam Moss was being hired from   certain style of illustration, again a lot of atti-  stuff until it clicks. I’ve never gone at it like ‘this   majored in psychology. Did you ever feel dif-
 The New York Times Magazine and thinking   tude and tone, a bit of humour.  is exactly what it needs to be.’ I’ve learned to   ferent to them?




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