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Things I learned from Paul Rand: 2 – Always Tweaking

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Things I learned from Paul Rand: 2 – Always Tweaking

I ended up spending the largest amount of time with Paul, working on his last book, “From Lascaux to Brooklyn.” It was a daily one-on-one grind, where he was sitting behind me, barking orders, while I furiously clicked away on Power Mac 8500.

"From Lascaux to Brooklyn" book cover
Paul Rand's final book

Never Finished

Thanks to his wife and love of his life, Marion, it was a 9-to-5 routine every day. If it was up to Paul, I’m sure we would’ve worked late every night, but Marion made sure I was out of their house before their dinner time. 

Still, every day was an adventure. Paul’s powerful enthusiasm and drive never looked like it came from an 80-year-old man. He was constantly coming up with new ideas: new topics to include in his book, different ways to tell the same story, brand new layout approaches.

But most of all, the thing I’ll never forget, is that nothing seemed to ever be the “final.” He was constantly “tweaking” everything: copies, layouts, the order of the pages, … really everything and anything he could think of. It was a common occurrence, where we would work on a layout for hours until he was finally happy. Only to find out next morning he worked late that same day to come up with another idea.

A layout like this often took hours and days.

Direction Magazine

Early in his career, Paul became famous for the magazine cover designs for Direction Magazine (1935-1945). They’ve been published over and over again including his Paul’s own books throughout the years. I was already familiar with most of them by the time I was working for him. 

"A Designer's Art" page 169
One of Paul's famous Direction Magazine cover design printed in "A Designer's Art"

One day, when I was working on the layouts in Direction Magazine section of his book, Paul casually suggested me to do what was unthinkable to me at the time. He told me to move the element in the middle of the layout down lower. 

I myself have seen this layout already in his published books, “Thoughts on Design” and “A Designer’s Art.” Not to mention other design history books I had already studied at my design school. I remember resisting, saying something like, “We can’t do that! We can’t change history!”

But he insisted, “It’s better this way, so change it!”

Direction Magazine cover design printed in "A Designer's Art"
From "A Designer's Art"
Direction Magazine cover design printed in "From Lascaux to Brooklyn"
From "From Lascaux to Brooklyn" -- He made me do it!

Just the way he worked

Over time, it slowly sunk into me, that this was just the way he worked. I started to notice many other known work by him that seemed to go through transitions over time. 

For example, here is an ingenious design Paul came up with for The Art Director’s Club. Notice the difference in the blue chin area in the version he published in his book just few years later. He was very particular about his colors, and I can only imagine how the original blue bugged the crap out of him until he fixed it. 

The Art Director's Club Call for Entry
The Art Director's Club Call for Entry 1989
The Art Director's Club Call for Entry layout published in "Design, Form, and Chaos" 1993
The same layout published few years later.

This tendency also showed up in real life. Paul was known to visit somebody’s house, soon become annoyed with the furniture layout, then make the person move all the furniture around until it was to Paul’s liking. His OCD never seemed to go dormant. 

If there is heaven, I would like to imagine that he is up there causing quite a stir, tirelessly making everybody run around to update and upgrade the environment.

>>> Continue to Part 3
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Phil

Versed in graphic design and advertising, Phil has worked at companies both large and small on international and national brands. His work has been recognized through a number of prestigious awards, including One Show, Communication Arts, CLIO, OBIE, International ANDY Awards, National ADDYs, Show South, Mobius and Effie. Phil also managed the Marketing & Design Department at INTEX Recreation Corp in Long Beach, California as a creative director for over ten years, overseeing print, digital and video work for over 2,000 products sold in over 120 countries worldwide.

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