This is the label design for Peter Stormare's vodka, what would you do differently ?
>>462889everything
>>462889Awful
I like it
>>462889It looks like a first draft someone ran by him too soon and he loved it. They obviously spent more time on the text for Vodka than Stomare probably because the name was still up in the air when the designer started on it. This is favor for a friend design. It's fair to assume the booze has the same level of care and attention out into it.With some, but not a lot of work this could all work serviciably.
Did he get a one time sum to use his image and name for the product, because he obviously doesn't give a fuck about recurring sales.
(Perhaps subconciously) influenced by picrel (both this particular design and the artist's general style and that of his era) the same way all rock guitar bands are influenced by Chuck Berry. Peter Max also did this more sloppy hippie-ish lettering style sometimes too and of course tons of people copied them.It's supposed to be quirky and bohemian and "honest" and have "soul".
>>462920Warhol also wasn't the only big name artist to crapify the word mark for that campaign to make it more arteestic...but it was a big thing in marketing that blurred the line between commercial and advertising art (hence Warhol) and people now who make crap looking vodka labels because it somehow looks right don't even know it's because they're copying that template.https://thebrandhopper.com/2024/09/14/a-case-study-on-absolut-vodkas-absolut-bottle-campaign/#The_Art_of_Collaboration_Absoluts_Partnerships_and_Limited_Editions
>>462921Wkj
>>462921Sorry, meant to say->tblurred the line between commercial and *fine* art (hence Warhol)
>>462923Yeah this isn't any of that. This is just bad fad design