For more pages from the Saturday, Oct. 11, edition:
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/de_telegraaf_goes_tabloid_second_day_pages
https://blendle.nl/issue/telegraaf/bnl-telegraaf-20141010
A design project can be compared to a marriage in at least one way: nobody really knows what happens in the intimacy of it, except the people involved.
The thought comes to mind as De Telegraaf unveils its new tabloid format today.
Here it is, folks! This iconic Dutch newspaper, usually the toast of the town for its daring headlines with an attitude (it is the newspaper that used the word “Murderers” in 350 point bold type when a Malaysian Airlines was shut down from the sky over the Ukraine with 196 Dutch nationals on board), its absolutely over the top circa 1954 make up (nobody dares call it design), and because it does not give a damn what anyone thinks of its look or its headlines.
Healthy, indeed. And, for me, what a joy to be invited, with our Garcia Media senior art director , Christian Fortanet, to be the consultants to the project when the publisher and editors decided to make the transition from broadsheet to tabloid format.
Hell, no. But it wasn’t my hardest project ever of the almost 700 completed to date (that title goes to Germany’s Die Zeit. Second most challenging, The Wall Street Journal).
Fun has nothing to do with difficulty—or should I say “challenge”? This was fun from the start, when we first converted the Weekend supplement to tabloid two years ago.
Here, however, it was converting the entire newspaper, carrying the whole load of that huge L that is LEGACY on our shoulders.
Today, as the new Telegraaf tabloid appears —it will be distributed by top editors at the Amsterdam Grand Central Station at 7 a.m.— there will undoubtedly those who will take a look, blink and say: nothing changed.
That’s fine. We know differently. The changes here were huge, and what is best, none affects the perception that long time readers have of this newspaper with its rich journalistic history.
De Telegraaf is as much a part of Holland as are canals and bikes. It is part of the landscape, with all its mismatched colors (there was no color palette), uneven columns (king of the dog legs), decorative borders (it could be a printer’s catalog), and everything circa before 1960. They wear it all with pride.
I am proud that I managed NOT to remove all of these jewels off the neck of the old paper. From time to time I reminded the editors not to wear all of their jewelry to the prom, that there will be another prom next year and the year after that. But old habits are hard to break, so don’t expect for all the jewelry to come off at once.
Don’t expect groundbreaking anything here. However, if true design is that which is functional, fits the product for which it is intended and respects history, then this may be groundbreaking.
More importantly, it is a lesson in not designing for us and our own taste, but for the product, its environment and its audience.
If you wish to study the new Telegraaf in detail, be on the lookout for these legacy elements of the “new’ design:
This is a term that designers under 45 years of age do not even recognize. It is a throw back to the days of metal type, when columns of type “cuddled up” to one another, leading to what the great pioneer of newspaper design, Ed Arnold, referred to as “brace make up”. A good term, indeed: I had to brace myself to reenact dog legs in 2014. In the end, I have come to like it. Notice that the dog legs, the cutting into photos, the avoidance of modules, has become a chic moment in the visual presentation of the new Telegraaf. Who would say? I know Professor Arnold smiles somewhere.
Three fonts constitute the typographic palette for the new De Telegraaf:
Stilson, Tablet Gothic, Abril Head
For about 16 months, we tried a variety of approaches. Working closely with Christian Fortanet, of our Garcia Media team, and Hans Haasnoot and Rig Hehenkamp, we experimented with various approaches to the look and feel of the new De Telegraaf.
This was the normal process of not leaving any idea behind, even though we knew that some of them would not play well with the editors of De Telegraaf.
At first our front pages were “too neat”, or “too elegant”, or “not the DNA of De Telegraaf“. Eventually, our approach became more streamlined, the headlines got bigger and we began to emphasize the key legacy elements that the editors did not wish to abandon.
Take a look at the pages and study the evolution!
I hope readers will like their new, smaller De Telegraaf. I also hope that students of design will judge it not by its look but by the lengths to which we all went to balance legacy, functionality, tradition and creating a printed newspaper for a digital age. In that sense, there are lessons to be learned with the new design of De Telegraaf.
Like in any marriage, the appearances may be misleading and not tell the complete story of what happens behind the scenes.
Like in a marriage, design projects include battles lost and battles won.
As I look at today’s new De Telegraaf I feel proud of the big and the little victories.
Here are assorted elements of the marketing campaign to spread the news about the new tabloid format. The successful campaign has added more than 20,000 subscribers as of today, even though the first tabloid edition of De Telegraaf will not appear until today.
The Road to Tabloid, Part 1
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/de_telegraaf_the_road_to_tabloid_part_1
The Road to Tabloid, Part 2
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/de_telegraaf_the_road_to_tabloid_part_2
The Road to Tabloid, Part 3
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/de_telegraaf_the_road_to_tabloid_part_3
Here is how the competition would have redesigned De Telegraaf
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/here_is_how_the_competition_would_redesign_de_telegraaf_as_tabloid
Interview with Mario Garcia (in Dutch): Volkskrant
http://www.volkskrant.nl/media/de-telegraaf-is-nu-echt-over-op-tabloid~a3765191/
Tabloide a la Holandesa
http://www.garcia-media.com.ar/blog/post/tabloide-a-la-holandesa/240