The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Designer on her logo that captured spirit of garden fest

I’m still really proud of my blooming great idea

- By Paul English MAIL@SUNDAYPOST.COM www.festival20­18glasgow.com.

The brief was to design an emblem of optimism and hope for a 1980s city at a time when both were thin on the ground.

Yet in those days of post-industrial decay, the colourful vision of a young graphic designer would go on to become one of the most popular logos in modern Scottish history, representi­ng the beginning of a postindust­rial renaissanc­e for the country’s biggest city, and evoking sunkissed memories 30 years later.

Shona Maciver was a junior member of staff at Glasgow design firm Westpoint when she pounced on the opportunit­y to submit a logo design for the upcoming Glasgow Garden Festival.

Her instantly recognisab­le brush strokes representi­ng a colourful bunch of flowers have since become one of the most enduring images of Scottish cultural iconograph­y.

Shona was 25 when her boss at Westpoint, Joe Hall, gave her the chance to submit a design for the festival.

“He gave me a chance to have a crack at it,” says Shona, originally from Dunfermlin­e.

“I was about 25, and I saw my moment. I spent a lot of time just trying to produce something really happy. The truth is that Glasgow in the 1980s was not a garden- like place.

“But everybody had this vision of doing something better, embodied in a sense of happiness. I tried to get this idea of happiness into the mark I was developing.

“I always felt when designing a brand that you shouldn’t try to be too clever about it. A brand is the visual equivalent of a word. It has to be just enough, not too much expression.

“For me a garden is about flowers. And I really wanted to get a feeling of spontaneit­y in it.

“The lines and the lettering, Glasgow Garden Festival ‘ 88, are brush strokes made by human hand. That gives a certain warmth to the mark.

“I remember a picture that my aunt had p a i n t e d. She had represente­d a flower’s shape with just a blue line, and I recall thinking how that was the very simplest mark you could make for a flower, and still recognise design.”

Festival bosses reached the unanimous decision that the simple, vibrant bloom Shona created would represent the ambitious jamboree of arts and horticultu­re which spread along the south side of the Clyde from April until September in 1988.

But her imprint reached well it. That influenced the beyond expectatio­ns at the time, let alone 30 years later.

In today’s terms, the logo went viral. As the garden festival’s popularity soared, with almost five million visitors, so did the emblem’s ubiquity.

Shona now runs Glasgow design company Locofoco, and will take part Celebratin­g Glasgow’s Gardens, a week- long gardening and wildlife event in celebratio­n of the garden festival’s 30th anniversar y on Glasgow Green as part of the city’s festival 2018. The originator of the festival’s war mly remembered bouquet will run workshops hoping to inspire the young designers of tomorrow, next Saturday and Sunday.

She said: “We’ll be looking at how nature can inspire us to make good choices in design.”

 ??  ?? Shona Maciver wearing a t-shirt bearing the famous logo for the garden festival, left
Shona Maciver wearing a t-shirt bearing the famous logo for the garden festival, left
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