Graphic Design Portfolio

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wear what’s yours available at

wear what’s yours available at


Some things don’t plug into your iPod.

Some things do.

Music-Driven Vibrators www.OhMiBod.com

Use this code to download a free sexy playlist AD8X3IFD06DFGRP9

(Lick &) place stamp here


Some things don’t plug into your iPod.

Some things do. Music-Driven Vibrators www.OhMiBod.com

Some things don’t plug into your iPod.

Music-Driven Vibrators www.OhMiBod.com

Some things do.


The Boston Symphony Orchestra is one of the most beloved musical institutions in the world. Through the generous financial support of more han 12,000 individuals, companies, foundations, and government agencies, the BSO presents more concerts annually than any other symphonic organization in America. The Orchestra also remains dedicated to education and community outreach.

Boston Symphony Orchestra 301 Massachusetts Avenue, Symphony Hall Boston, MA 02115 Phone: 617.266.1492 (M-F: 10-5pm) Tickets: 888.266.1200 (M-F: 10-6pm; Sat: 12-6pm

Russian posters.indd 1

10/6/10 3:15 PM


The Boston Symphony Orchestra is one of the most beloved musical institutions in the world. Through the generous financial support of more han 12,000 individuals, companies, foundations, and government agencies, the BSO presents more concerts annually than any other symphonic organization in America. The Orchestra also remains dedicated to education and community outreach.

Boston Symphony Orchestra 301 Massachusetts Avenue, Symphony Hall Boston, MA 02115 Phone: 617.266.1492 (M-F: 10-5pm) Tickets: 888.266.1200 (M-F: 10-6pm; Sat: 12-6pm

Russian posters.indd 3

10/6/10 3:15 PM


Raise Your Glass Annual Report 2010


Our Beer. Your Beer. The heart and soul of The Boston Beer Company comes to life in our three breweries. In 2010 our team of brewers brewed and packaged 30 distinct styles of beers and eight fl avors of Twisted Tea. We introduced nine new products, including the new Samuel Adams® Barrel Room Collection of three Belgian-style beers—American Kriek, New World Tripel, and Stony Brook Red. For the past two years, the Boston Beer Co., maker of Samuel Adams beers, has been working with Germany's Weihenstephan Brewery, the world's oldest brewery, to create an entirely new style of beer. Boston Beer founder Jim Koch and Weihenstephan director Josef Schradler announced this morning that the collaboration is complete. The new beer is a champagne-like ale called Infinium. The two brewers claim Infinium is the first new beer created under the German beer purity law, called the Reinheitsgebot, in more than 100 years. (Under the law, only four ingredients -- malt, hops, yeast, and water -- can be used to make beer.) Koch says it's a deep golden, bubbly ale with a fruity aroma and contains 10.3 percent alcohol, more than twice that in a Sam Adams Boston Lager.

THE BOSTON BEER COMPANY, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (In thousands, except share data)

THE BOSTON BEER COMPANY, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (In thousands, except share data)

December 26, 2010

December 27, 2009

Year Ended

ASSETS Current Assets: Cash and cash equivalents

REVENUE (net of product recall returns of $13,222 in fiscal 2008) $ 55,481

$ 9,074

Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $199 and $255 as of December 26, 2010 and December 27, 2009, respectively

17,856

18,057

Inventories

25,558

22,708

Prepaid expenses and other assets

9,710

16,281

Deferred income taxes

4,425

2,734

Total current assets

113,030

68,854

Property, plant and equipment, net

147,021

147,920

Other assets

1,508

Goodwill Total assets

Less excise taxes Net revenue Cost of goods sold (including costs associated with product recall of $9,473 in fiscal 2008) Gross profit

December 26, 2010

December 27, 2009

December 29, 2008

$453,446

$436,332

$380,575

38,393

37,932

38,928

415,053

398,400

341,647

201,235

214,513

152,288

213,818

183,887

189,359

OPERATING EXPENSES: 121,560

132,901

124,457

General and administrative expenses

Advertising, promotional and selling expenses

36,938

34,988

24,574

1,606

Impairment of long-lived assets

1,049

1,936

3,443

1,377

1,377

Total operating expenses

159,547

169,825

152,474

$262,936

$219,757

OPERATING INCOME

54,271

14,062

36,885

Interest income

112

1,604

4,252

Other (expense) income, net

(16)

174

507

96

1,778

4,759 41,644

Other income, net:

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY Current Liabilities: Accounts payable

$ 25,255

$ 20,203

Accrued expenses

48,531

46,854

Total current liabilities

73,786

67,057

Income before provision for income taxes

54,367

15,840

Deferred income taxes

13,439

9,617

Provision for income taxes

23,249

7,752

19,153

Other liabilities

2,556

3,055

NET INCOME

$ 31,118

$ 8,088

$ 22,491

Total liabilities

89,781

79,729

Net income per common share —basic

$ 2.21

$ 0.58

$ 1.58

Net income per common share —diluted

$ 2.17

$ 0.56

$ 1.53

Weighted-average number of common shares — basic

14,059

13,927

14,193

Weighted-average number of common shares — diluted

14,356

14,341

14,699

COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES Stockholders’ Equity: Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value; 22,700,000 shares authorized; 10,142,494 and 10,068,486 shares issued and outstanding as of December 26, 2010 and December 27, 2009, respectively Class B Common Stock, $.01 par value; 4,200,000 shares authorized; 4,107,355 shares issued and outstanding Additional paid-in capital Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of tax

101

101

41

41

111,668

102,653

(359)

(431)

Retained earnings

61,704

37,664

Total stockholders’ equity

173,155

140,028

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. 39

Total other income, net

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. 40


Graphic Standards Manual

FONTS GOTHAM HTF

AABBCcDdEe 0123456789 &!$’

Logo

ULTRA ITALIC & MEDIUM ITALIC, All Caps

Headings

ULTRA ITALIC & MEDIUM ITALIC, All Caps

Subheads Copy Captions

MEDIUM ITALIC, ALL CAPS Book XLight Italic

5


INTRODUCTION 3 LOGO 4 FONTS 5 COLORS 6 STATIONERY 7 EXAMPLES 11 COLORS Rich Black:

C 60 M 60 Y 60 K 100

Solar Yellow/ Pantone DS 5-2C C0 M 18 Y 100 K0

Tints of the two primary colors may be used. Colors may not be added to headlines or subheads of publications. Black and white versions of the logo must always be shown in full black or full white, only when making a watermark can a tint of the logo be used.

6


we’re all drug mules.

Plastic doesn’t disappear, it really just turns to dust. It ends up in the earth, in our ground water, and in our air. It’s in all of our lungs. Americans use 1,500 plastic water bottles per second.

We’re ALL ADDICTED TO PLASTIC.


HEROIN

CRACK

stop plastic addiction

do a line...

Plastic doesn’t disappear. Plastic bags take up to 1000 years to break down, and even then, it really just turns to dust. It ends up in the earth, in our ground water, and in our air.

you wouldn’t snort it, so why breathe it ?


context magazine

cultural perspectives from the everyday

the melbourne supremecy

All Together Now Home Office 101 Green Dreams Making Space Work Sustainable Mattresses


Story by Helen Kaiser / Photos by Peter Bennetts

Melbourne is a city of layers, with the best-kept secrets

veiled beneath ever-changing skies and polite façades. International events like the F1 Grand Prix and the Australian Open tennis tournament greet visitors with exuberance, but the real Melbourne, like its inhabitants,is less overt and reveals itself reluctantly.

From its founding around 1835, Melbourne’s past can be traced in a fraying tapestry of historic buildings, from the Victorian boom time of the mid- to late 19th century, through the Federation era, during which the first unique Australian style was established, to the prosperous domestic idyll of the 1950s. Fragments of that modernist ideal can still be found, mostly in the sprawling suburbs, which have now joined former satellite towns to form one vast, flat mass of housing surrounding Port Phillip Bay. Without the spectacular topography of Sydney or the sunny climbs of Perth or Brisbane, this southern city has had to create its own character and, in doing so, has developed a healthy self-confidence.

December 2010

cultural perspectives from the everyday Gallery of Victoria, that I would choose to view this city. As a photographer, what do you think makes Melbourne unique?

The ever-changing light. Here we famously get four seasons in one day, which can be a bit miserable in winter. Apart from being cold, it often rains, and the light is diffuse-the clouds are low and it’s not really an eerie fog that we get so much as just flat light. Whereas in summer the light here is what you would expect anywhere in Australia: It’s harsh and direct, Captions: Across the Yarra River, Melbourne’s skyline has grown dramatically since the 1980. The Royal Exhibition Building, completed in 1880 for the International Exhibition, is the first World Heritage-listed building in Australia.

In the last decade, Melbourne has thrived,

fostering a burgeoning creative force, which has radically changed the urban and cultural landscape. Architectural patrons, both civil and civic, have become increasingly adventurous, propelling the surge in cutting-edge buildings. The contemporary art scene is dynamic and innumerable festivals fill the calendar. In every alley, basement, and attic, enterprising spirits are creating holein-the-wall bars, multimedia galleries, collaborative design studios, and experimental dining experiences. They are neither obvious nor attention-seeking, but they bubble away beneath the surface of a prospering culture. Capturing all of this manic energy on film gives photographer Peter Bennetts a virtual all-access pass to the city. The widely published, quietly spoken Bennetts shared his local favorites with Habitat.

There doesn’t seem to be the conformity in Melbourne that is apparent in other Australian cities. Do you think the city is enjoying an increased confidence in its architectural expression?

Absolutely. And we are relatively affluent. Opportunities abound. So you would expect creativity to flourish under such luxurious circumstances. We’ve got great design schools and, really, everything we have is as good as anywhere in the world. We all live on the coast looking out to the horizon and we know what’s behind us. From that position comes confident expression. The other thing about Australian creativity and architectural culture is that we’re well traveled. And yet we choose to come back. I’m a bit like Dorothy-I click my heels and say, “There’s no place like home.”

erspectives from the everyday

Melbourne Museum, which symbolizes for me the resurgent confidence of the late 1990s. It is at once gray and colorful, low and soaring.

On the south side of the Yarra is the Tan track, a 2.3-mile running track that circumnavigates the Royal Botanic Gardens. Here you can be passed, quickly, by the likes of Olympian Cathy Freeman while you see some great buildings, like architect Robin Boyd’s

We all live on the coast looking out to the horizon and we know what’s behind us. From that position comes confident expression.

Melbourne’s not as geographically impressive as Sydney, but are there still vistas that stop you in your tracks? Flat Melbourne’s certainly not our flashy northern sister, but Sydney’s one shot. You’d photograph for a lifetime to get the essence of Melbourne. The Yarra River is really Melbourne’s chief geographical feature, but the city is more famous (rightly so) for its parks and gardens. The Carlton Gardens are home to the World Heritage-listed Royal Exhibition Building, and behind it is the

Royal Domain, a fine 1950s apartment tower, and the Shrine of Remembrance, perhaps Melbourne’s most recognizable building-certainly its most symbolic. I love that if all its vertical lines were projected, they would meet at a point 1.4 miles above the building. Why? I don’t know! From there you view the inner city down St. Kilda Road, Melbourne’s great boulevard. It’s here, more than anywhere else, where I feel the city’s continuously shifting light, weather, and seasons. And it’s from here, before the Princes Bridge, flanked by the King’s Domain and the National

provides great contrast, and is the ultimate revealer of form, like probing an object with a laser. If you were to guide a visitor through the inner-city grid, where would you take them? You have to walk to really see Melbourne; that way, you’ll get glimpses of notable architecture from the Victorian era through late postmodernism. Coasting down Flinders Lane you’ll catch framed views of Federation Square set against

Visitors should get their digital camera ready for the drive into the city. It really sets you up for all that Melbourne can be.

cobblestones-a public space that’s been widely embraced by Melburnians-and some Gothic revival and urban art projects. You’ll continue past Anna Schwartz’s serious contemporary art gallery, see the view south to Flinders Street Station and north to the neoGothic beauty Manchester Unity Building, and pull up at cafés, bars, and

restaurants in Centre and Degraves lanes. It’s cool-hunter central!

Which of the city’s highlights have enduring appeal for you? We talk a lot about Melbourne’s laneways. While there’s not any one you’d name over another, they’re an enduring legacy of our city’s founding fathers.

Also, there are some of the best examples of Victorian building in the world here, like South Melbourne Town Hall and Melbourne Trades Hall. These public buildings are on the tops of hills and you get glimpses of them as you drive or [ride the] tram or walk around Melbourne. And you can’t forget Melbourne Gateway. You really know you’ve arrived when you drive down the Tullamarine Freeway, past “the cheese stick,” through the speed tube. Visitors should get their digital camera ready for the drive into the city. It really sets you up for all that Melbourne can be. Any great new public works?

Melbourne Museum, Federation Square, Southern Cross Station, and the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art by Wood Marsh are the best examples. I like to think that each is diametrically opposed to the others, and geographically they almost take up opposing sides of the city. It’s as if they’re better for the presenc e of the others; the total is more than the sum

Continued on pg. 10 December 2010

cultural perspectives from the everyday


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