Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Powder Paradise

Look at this exquisite image complements of gifted photographer Charlie Brown, who is covering Hotham this winter. He shares his weekly adventures on his blog Mountainside.net.au which is well worth following.
Well, despite the detractors, the snow has turned up in force. Today there was a powder alert, to remind everyone where they really ought to be!
Mt Hotham is the highest Alpine Resort in Australia. We don't have massive alps like other spots in the world but we are unique. There is nothing like skiing amongst the gum trees which are twisted and gnarled by age and the elements.
The drive to Hotham is astounding. Near the top you get the full vista of North East Victoria, rolling away endlessly in a rhythm of peaks and valleys. Every day is different with an ever changing interplay of light and cloud.
Unlike many mountainsides, we enjoy a lot of clear weather in winter in Australia. Crystal days where you can see forever and glide through dry snow.
Enjoy



Tuesday, 8 July 2014

revisiting

I had a chance this week to revisit old skills that I haven't used for years. As a student of Graphic Design in the late 1970's, I was taught by some of the best designers in the country at that time. Our teachers were all hands on. They had to be practicing artists to get the job. A lot like TAFE teachers today.
It was a pleasure working on this job as I reflected on what those gifted people taught me so long ago. Gaining the skills was very project based. An artist literally showed you how to use the tools and materials and then watched you practice. This is how I learned to choose brushes, measure accurately, brush rule, mix paint, hand letter and present artwork.
Many of my teachers had long careers behind them. They were at the forefront of graphics for advertising and the print industry. Some of the illustrators had designed and produced the finished art for Australia's money and stamps. Others had spent their career illustrating books and ads.
One vivacious teacher had learnt to draw and perfected his skill as a soldier in Korea. He had survived 5 beach head assaults to go to Hollywood and paint scenery and then to Australia.
Some of these artists had such a level of skill that you couldn't quite imagine how anyone could make such beautiful work.
I have never attained that level of skill. Times change. Illustration made way for photography so the demand was not there. Practicing artists typically adapt to the conditions especially if they relate to the print industry.
Illustration is making its way back in to popularity but that level of dexterity seems to have gone. Technology gives us an out clause.
When I was working as a Graphic Designer you could work for a week on a job on the desk and if you weren't careful it could all be ruined in an instant.
Now you just delete latest move!
Vicki

Monday, 9 June 2014

Long weekend

The long weekend has just come and gone. The opening of the ski season in Australia. There is rarely any snow so early in the season but the media seems to be making a big deal of that this year.
Usually everyone apres skis on that first weekend. Catching up with mates and enjoying the beautiful mountains with a sense of anticipation.
Falls Creek hosts a mass swim in the Rocky Valley Dam which is not for the faint hearted. There might be something in it though.
My Brother in Law was Norwegian and his Grandmother, who lived well in to her 90's swam in the North Sea every day!
Tom used to love to ski all day, then have a sauna and roll in the snow. A habit that was not widely adopted by his Australian relatives!
We managed to finish painting outside before the weather changed, so blame us for the Indian Summer.


Monday, 2 June 2014

Winter

It has been an unseasonably warm May for Southern Australia. Good to enjoy real Autumn splendor. Some weather predictors are saying that it will be too warm to snow. It is very hard to get everything to line up perfectly.
There is seldom any snow for the opening of the season on the June long weekend. It is 13 degrees and rainy here today, which is a typical winters day. So I think it is pretty much business as usual.
Australian snow is precious. Overseas they measure it in huge proportions whereas here we treasure all we can get. Having said that, the consistency is different because of the dry climate AND we have many sunny days to enjoy it.
A snow associate working in Japan was talking about their Northern resorts where powder snow falls most days. What they don't say is that it is also overcast a lot of the time.
We enjoy blue sky, very old mountains and unique snow. What more could you want.

Monday, 12 May 2014

The last rays of Autumn


Driving down through the Alpine valleys on the weekend, the landscape was filled with glimmering light. The last colour of Autumn radiated from the trees and the sky shimmered in pink and gold.
A lone paraglider soared over Bright. One of the last chances this Autumn before it gets too cold.
The anticipation for the snow season is starting to build as everyone gets the lodges in order ready for a busy season. Last minute repairs, firewood delivered, a buzz in the air.
Frost and snow showers are starting to drift across the North East.
Winter is in the wind.

Sunday, 4 May 2014

an early season

It has started to snow in the Victorian Alpine region and everyone starts talking about an early season.
It certainly was beautiful to see the slow flurry of large flakes on the weekend and the extraordinary beauty of sunlight filtering through it.
Activity on the mountain starts to gain momentum as the forecasts change and keen observers start to plan around the latest information.
The blanketing of sound is something that catches you by surprise as the landscape is defined  by its texture.
I have included an image of clouds, such deftly repeated patterns in nature.
It looks like powder snow.


Wednesday, 30 April 2014

CENTENARY






We were privileged to celebrate Ken's Mother's 100th birthday over the Anzac weekend.
Such a gift to have the wisdom of 100 years as part of your family. Lorna was born during the first rumblings of World War 1 and endured the Great Depression and World War 2.
She has a very different view about the motivations of the world and how to survive it sustainably.
She has always been a very modest and careful person who knows what it is like to live through hard times.
A kitchen drawer was always full of the ends of string, brown paper bags to be reused and other flotsam that we younger ones throw away without a thought.
Ken made his Mother a beautiful invitation to the party which included all her descendants and the amazing array of inventions and modern innovations during her life.
She loves the Ipad. Chatting daily with family and friends and keeps her mobile phone nearby in case of emergencies.
Emma asked her about life when she was little. Horses and carts to get around or in their case trains, trams and shanks pony (walking).
She felt that computers, cars and mobile technology had vastly changed society over a short span of time.
When she was young no one talked about cyber bullying, climate change and online dating. You met through Church groups, work and friends.
A gentler time.

Monday, 21 April 2014

Easter at Dinner Plain

Magic Design Workshop has a mountain office at Dinner Plain. Located 10 kilometers from Mount Hotham in the Victorian high country. It is an exquisite place.
Winter sees this village buzzing with activity as keen skiers and holiday makers enjoy life above the snow line. Snow play, beginner skiing and tobogganing are some of the activities on offer as visitors enjoy unique accommodation with easy access to the serious skiing opportunities at Mount Hotham.
Dinner Plain has something for everyone all year round. In spring and summer, the alpine bush is a continually changing kaleidoscope of wild flowers with sublime walking tracks around the village, to Mount Hotham and beyond. Walking out to Mount Feathertop is a profound experience as you look over the entire Victorian Alpine region that rolls in continuous vignettes of blue as far as the eye can see.
Autumn at Dinner Plain can be frosty, cool and mild as the bush plants finish their flowering cycle ready for winter. Cosy lodges, open fires and good company makes it an ideal destination for Easter. The town is brimming with families. Kids relishing the freedom to ride their bikes around the village unencumbered. We have seen tribes of kids some as young as 5 brushing the frost off their bike at 7am ready to do the circuit whilst Mum and Dad enjoy the peace of a really good coffee to start the day.
This Easter we walked along the fire trail at the back of the village taking the little paths that circle off in to the bush. Yasmin found an antler. A souvenir from one of the deer that live amongst the trees. We were intrigued by its texture. Very hard, smooth and cold to touch. Not like bone. Collections of mossy branches and the treasured antler have made their way to Melbourne as a special memento of Easter at Dinner Plain.

Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Portrait of the Artists cat

Neo the Magic Design Workshop cat has a lovely story.
In the exhausting heat of mid summer in regional Australia we kept seeing a black blur in the garden on dusk. Everyone saw it and wondered what it was.
After about 6 weeks we were having a barbeque one evening and the smell of the dinner cooking was too much for him. The most beautiful cat appeared out of the shadows and began rolling around on the paving. Neo had moved in.
We think he was dumped at Christmas probably by someone going away and thinking our place would make a good home.
He was immediately embraced and named after Neo of The Matrix fame because he would disappear and reappear in the strangest places like he was using a time warp. You would find him lounging somewhere comfortable and no one remembered letting him in.
We have had a series of design cats and dogs, who like nothing more than sitting on your seat in the studio or chewing the phone line when you are on an important call.
There had to be a line drawn about studio etiquette. Neo will come in and peruse the work being done. He rarely comments, stays for a while and then returns to the garden that he loves.

Thursday, 10 April 2014

Magic Design Workshop introducing Matt Naldrett

Matt Naldrett is a brilliant designer, copy writer and conceptualist. He has been part of the fold at Magic Design Workshop for many years. With a background in Advertising, he is an expert in snow promotion and brings enthusiasm to every project he is involved in.

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Introducing the Magic design family - Emma Luke/ Mecurialist

Emma Luke:

Is the daughter of Ken and Vicki Luke, also from a background in Industrial design Emma has a jewellery label called Mecurialist and also collaborates on 3D product and public art design projects with Magic Design Workshop.

Emma also runs a contemporary jewellery collective called Stone Glint and Bone, located in South Melbourne.













www.mecurialist.com.au
mecurialist.blogspot.com
boticca.com/mecurialist
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mecurialist/144481522255864

Introducing the magic design workshop family Thom Luke & Threshold Design

Thom Luke:

Thom Luke Son of Ken and Vicki is an Industrial designer  whilst collaborating on 3D projects with Magic Design Workshop he also runs Threshold  Design a multi-faceted design consultancy based in Fitzroy, Melbourne.

With a focus on Innovative, experimental and result driven projects, his strengths are derived from an ability to plan and design successful solutions before taking them to fruition.

Thom specializes in:

Product design, development and fabrication;
Retail design, fabrication and installation;
Event design and installation;
production design and logistics;





http://www.somespace.com.au

http://www.thresholdesign.com.au

Introducing the Magic Design Workshop family

Ken Luke:

Ken has worked as a graphic designer for over thirty years, from the era of commercial artists, airbrushing, letraset and Pantone markers when it really was Magic Design! to the world of Indesign, shiny macs and the digital now. working for a huge range of clients, including large international companies, government organizations and medical agencies right down to the smallest of businesses.






http://au.linkedin.com/pub/ken-luke/25/5a7/b4b
http://www.mdw.net.au






Introducing the Magic Design workshop family: Vicki Luke

Vicki Luke



Vicki Luke has been drawing and painting for as long as she can remember. From the child who always drew in the dirt, to a keen art student throughout school. Growing up in Albury, her enthusiasm for art developed into an active arts practice.

After leaving school Vicki moved to Sydney to develop her passion. A year at Sydney University with a teachers scholarship convinced her to acquire hands on skills, so she studied Graphic Design.
Working as a designer and illustrator in Sydney and then in the Albury region has kept Vicki constantly involved in the creative community. After independently working as a Graphic Designer for twenty years she returned to study to refresh her skills.

Fine Arts has been her primary activity since then. Known throughout the region for her work as an exhibiting artist, a TAFE teacher and a regular guest artist in community workshops.
Vicki Luke is a passionate collaborator who believes that everyone should enjoy their creative side.


http://au.linkedin.com/pub/vicki-luke/71/626/733
http://vickiluke.blogspot.com.au/

Welcome to the Workshop of Magic design

Magic Design Workshop is a muti functional design agency founded in 1984 by Ken and Vicki Luke, with a rich history in graphic design and branding the business is based between offices in Albury and the Victorian Alps, these days the firm has extended it's reach to also encompass product design, public art and web development projects.




- A sneak peak inside the fine art and jewellery studio, MDW also runs private art and design workshops at our Albury and Dinner plain premises.

http://www.mdw.net.au/