Two of three pages that reveal how Steinweiss created his unique looking designs. Eventually available from Photo Lettering in NYC. Steinweiss Scrawl, created because it was easier to handletter headings than wait for typesetters. Thirty remarkable looking roughs Steinweiss produced on tissue paper and looking almost like the finished designs.ħ8 box covers from the early forties with examples of angled type which was so common in European modernist graphics. Left: a delightful cover for a Kostelanetz 78 box set in 1942.Įric Kohler's 1999 Chronicle Books paperback takes an historic look back at covers from the forties to the sixties. Taschen really delivered with this one.Īlex Steinweiss: The Inventor of the Modern Album Cover is available at Amazon ( US | CA | UK | DE | FR | IT | ES | JP | CN) This sumptuous book is worth getting if you are interested in graphic design history and although it concentrates on just one person and one part of commercial creativity it does it so well and held my interest right through its 420 pages. At fifty-five in 1972 he decided to ease himself out of print creativity, moved to Florida in 1974 and started to paint, create collages and ceramics. After Columbia he designed covers for Decca, Coral and Everest labels but by the sixties with color photos of artists now the main visual attraction on LPs I think his work is very similar to the great mass of album covers. Though most of the book's images are the wonderful album covers, either for the 78 box sets or, from 1948, long player records there are plenty of examples of other work from Steinweiss: brochures movie credits magazine spreads ads and promotional work for Columbia and some packaging. The script was eventually produced by Photo-Lettering, New York, for anyone to use: called Steinweiss Scrawl. So Steinweiss drew his own type, a casual hand-lettered script to use on the covers and you can see versions of this pop up on lots of the albums throughout the book. Another restriction that inspired a creative solution was the lack of a local typesetters in Bridgeport, Connecticut where Columbia was located. Clearly the restrictive printing style encouraged this. Somehow their simplicity and directness makes them feel fresh even today. I love the big selection of covers for the classics. This printing format dictated a rather flat graphic style that would be a challenge for any designer so Steinweiss used bright colors, graphic shapes, simple illustrations and bold typography to create an eye-catching poster style design that clearly stood out in record shops. There were no color photos and very few mono ones. The designs weren't printed using conventional four color process work but used three or four flat colors, whatever Steinweiss chose depending on the music style. Page seventy-one reveals why the covers had a rather unique look. Steinweiss was their Art Director from 1940 (only twenty-three, too) and created fresh different designs for these boxes. It's certainly a lavish production with hundreds of covers, especially those from the Columbia's 78 box sets during the forties. The Product Details above will give you some background about the book's contents. Now reprinted in a much more affordable copy so we can all enjoy looking at some remarkable album covers that still fascinate more than five decades later. Taschen originally published this big book as a limited edition keepsake to celebrate the design work of Alex Steinweiss.
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