{"id":148,"date":"2008-06-19T14:41:24","date_gmt":"2008-06-19T19:41:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/crowdspring.wpengine.com\/?p=148"},"modified":"2022-05-09T14:45:45","modified_gmt":"2022-05-09T19:45:45","slug":"12-questions-meet-fred-kylander-sweden","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.crowdspring.com\/blog\/12-questions-meet-fred-kylander-sweden\/","title":{"rendered":"12 Questions: Meet Fred Kylander (Sweden)"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the first in what will be a regular series in our blog where we’ll feature interviews with someone (a creative and\/or a buyer) from the crowdSPRING community.<\/p>\n
We’ll pick people who add value to our community – in the blog, in the forums, in the projects. Plainly – activities that make crowdSPRING a better community. Be professional, treat others with respect, help us build something very special, and we’ll take notice. Really.<\/p>\n
We’re very proud to feature Fred Kylander (crowdSPRING username: fredK<\/a>) today. Fred lives and works in Sweden.<\/p>\n I’m 43 years old, going on 24 \ud83d\ude09 Raised in a typical mid-70’s white middleclass suburb, the third of four kids (two sisters on either side, one older brother), imprinted with liberal ideals, learned to read and write at an early age, attended an English speaking kindergarten (not because I have English blood anywhere but because my mum and the proprietor of the school were good friends and my sister had gone there before me) and was fluent in English about the same time I was fluent in Swedish. Moved to the big city (Stockholm) around the age of 11. Did sports mostly at this time. Was an incredibly skilled left winger on the football pitch and did okay on the tennis courts. A bum knee put paid to any dreams I had of becoming the next great football pro. My favorite football team is, was and will always be Liverpool FC.<\/p>\n 2. How did you start out as a designer? <\/strong><\/p>\n Well, I’ve always messed with design one way or another but I never had any real plan to make a career out of it. Mostly because my brother is a great designer, much better than I am, so it seemed pointless to try and compete with him. But I’ve always messed with design one way or another and I’ve always had a passionate interest for typography, and little by little, via a number of office positions, I found myself doing graphic design part time while simultaneously working with customer service at Preem Petroleum, one of Sweden’s largest oil companies. Oddly enough, as large as the company is, it didn’t have any in-house marketing division until 1996 when I was hired along with one other artist. (Graphic design wasn’t really accepted as a profession in the Swedish industry world at the time, unless of course you worked for an ad agency. It’s improved since, but the situation still isn’t great, something that affects the freelance market.) I guess that’s where my ‘career’ as graphic designer began. I say ‘career’ because I still have a hard time seeing myself as a professional designer. It’s just something that I do. Like breathing.<\/p>\n I am self-taught, in graphics design. That may also have something to do with it.<\/p>\n 3. What great design(s) have you seen recently that you love?<\/strong><\/p>\n The latest design that made me stop and take notice \u2013 actually I oo’ed and laughed out loud the first time i saw it \u2013 is the Apple Macbook Air. It’s the only one that sticks in my mind right now. There’s the iPhone\/iPod Touch as well of course, but the MacBook Air is the latest one.<\/p>\n 4. Who\/what are some of the biggest influences on your design work?<\/strong><\/p>\n The single biggest influence? Pop culture, without a doubt. Record covers, T-shirts, posters. If I have to pick one, I’d say that the cover of David Bowie’s album “Low” from 1977 was one that really opened my eyes. Besides pop culture, I’m fairly heavily influnced by everyday items: street signs, billboards, food labels, things that we use and see all the time without really thinking too much about them. I think that one reason I’m influenced by these things is that they are usually type driven and, as I said, typography is my real passion in the area of design. I read a book, “Typically Typographic” by Swedish master typographer Bo Berndal, some time in the early 90’s, and it confirmed a number of things I thought I knew about letters and words and how they work. There are a couple of other books that have been important as well, but that one was essential to me.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Other big influences, if you want names, are artists like Henri Cartier-Bresson, Andy Warhol, Giacometti, Matisse, Cezanne, Bu\u00f1uel, Godard, Tati, Fellini, Orson Welles and others of that vein. Mostly though, I’m influenced by the slightly more anonymous art that accompany the works of film, literature, theatre and music artists. I’m pretty sure there are only a handful of people that can name the designer responsible for the “Low” cover, for example. I can’t. But I love it.<\/p>\n 5. What’s the very first thing you do when approaching a new design?<\/strong><\/p>\n The very first thing? It depends a little bit on the project, but generally speaking, the very first thing I do\u00a0 other than listen closely to what the client says she (he) wants to see is research. I’ll check out the client’s competitors as much as I can, I will look at the intended context of the design and try to look at comparative products, to get a feel for what the trends are, what’s been done already, and what’s missing. Sometimes you can overdo the research and become crippled by it, but in general terms I find that the better I’ve researched a project, the more solid the end result will be. Once in a while you’ll get a project that you think you know inside out, and as long as you have a good concept it’ll work just fine. Doing fresh research of the area could stand that assumption on its head though and give you a whole set of new ideas. So: research.<\/p>\n 6. Which of your designs are your favorites and why?<\/strong><\/p>\n Oh, goodness. The next one, generally speaking. I’m never truly satisfied with my designs, there’s always some My favorites of the designs I’ve done at crowdSPRING are mostly the first versions. The first VectorRaptor concept; the first Staircase 3 concept; the initial Count Me In concept. Although the last version of thenetwork.net’s logo is also one of my favorites.<\/p>\n
<\/a> 1. Please tell us about yourself.<\/strong><\/p>\n
<\/a>detail that can be improved on, or a nagging feeling that even though I might think that the work is great, it’s probably not. I did one design for a concept that would have been what is now FRDK (my brand), the working name was Pink Elephants (don’t ask why, it started as a mock brand for a website template I designed a couple of years ago) and the logo came out really nice. I liked it a lot. I haven’t kept a copy though and the concept is long since scrapped.<\/p>\n
<\/a>The logo design<\/a> I created for the University of Cumbria Student Union (UCSU), that was shortlisted and almost selected, is another favorite. I think mostly because everyone around me said it wasn’t especially good, and then it came very close to being selected by the actual users. I like it. It’s in my cS portfolio.<\/p>\n