02 In Our Backyard: Sunday Service at the Whitechapel

March 14th, 2010

Here is another little gem from our backyard. The Whitechapel’s latest exhibition “Where Three Dreams Cross: 150 Years of Photography From India, Pakistan and Bangladesh” (not a snappy title I will admit!) is a lovely feast of imagery that celebrates the last 150 years of Photography in the subcontinent. From candid portraiture to reportage there is a little bit of everything and a lot of work – some 400 pieces in fact! Best of all entrance to the Whitechapel is free, yes FREE from 11am-1pm every Sunday.

But wait…. there’s more.

With the weather now starting to pick up a little (I am whispering this to avoid tempting fate) Brick Lane market is thriving and lets face it nothing stirs the appetite more than a nosey at some art, a mosey round the corner and an array of street food. I had spicy meatballs and watched a man make udon noodles from scratch… Top class Sunday!

Noodle-tastic

Noodle-tastic!

The Truman tower in the sun!

Cherries by the sea

March 14th, 2010

In order to do a spot of research for a potential new project we popped to a very bright but blustery Hastings to see what we could see beside the sea! Fish and chips were of course high on the agenda as was soaking up the atmosphere in this historic fishing town! Nothing like a Cherry day trip to help us trawl for a big catch of creativity!

Secret Wars – London V Amsterdam

March 4th, 2010

A couple of weeks back we headed along to The Book Club on Leonard St for the grand beginning of the Secret Wars Euro league. Good music, plenty of drinks and a room crammed full of people hungry for the long awaited battle led to a highly charged atmosphere. London came out on top, maybe helped by a slightly biased crowd, who knows? But the judges also swung in their favour. See the highlights below…

Beware the typo

February 25th, 2010

In 1631 Robert Baker, the King’s Printer, produced a Bible with the little word ‘not’ missing from the seventh commandment, thus instructing worshipers: ‘Thou shalt commit adultery.’

Known as the Wicked Bible, the Archbishop of Canterbury ordered the book be burnt and Baker was sent to prison where he stayed until his death.

Which all goes to show, type most certainly matters!

01 In our Backyard: Four Stories Tall

February 23rd, 2010

This is the first installment of “In our backyard”, a new blog feature that you will see popping up from time to time. When we see something worth shouting about within a stones throw of the studio we’ll be sure to let you know about it.

First off is Four Stories Tall which divides Homer’s Odyssey into twelve equal measures, split across the four pillars of modern storytelling – film, theatre, literature and music. Novelists, thespians, auteurs and musicians across the city have been developing their own unique ‘odyssey twelfth’. On the night all interpretations will be put back together to reform the story. How will it all turn out??

Head to Queen of Hoxton tonight at 7.30! See you there.

Four Stories Tall

Whooooaaaaaaa!!!

February 23rd, 2010

Neurosonics Live from Chris Cairns on Vimeo.

This is real! No post production in sight!

Holographic projection experts Musion have joined forces with Director Chris Cairns to create a live performance based on his Neurosonics Audiomedical Labs film, which features a number of disembodied rapping heads…

Watch the live footage in the clip above.

Lonely Planet TravelWall at Destinations

February 8th, 2010

If you made it down to Destinations travel show at Earls Court last week, chances are you stuck your best travel moments from 2009 on the massively successful Lonely Planet TravelWall.

The wall, part of the Lonely Planet stand designed by our incredibly talented Graham (“It’s the biggest thing I’ve ever designed!”), created a fantastic buzz, with hundreds of stickers covering practically every available space by Sunday afternoon.

What a well-travelled bunch the Destinations crowd turned out to be. The Cherry contribution? A mere day trip to Amsterdam!

Fifty years of graphic work (and play)

February 5th, 2010


Alan Fletcher’s retrospective has travelled not just ‘north of the river’ but to the real North and is now residing in the CUBE gallery, Manchester. Packed to the rafters with some of the most highly regarded design examples of the last fifty years you certainly get your money’s worth at a very northern price of £4.50.

Significant highlights include video interviews with Fletcher as he guides you around the studio he built during a career that saw him help establish not only Fletcher/Forbes/Gill in the 60’s but also Pentagram in the 70’s. This is where some of the best work lies as business cards, letter heads and logotypes from countless projects adorn the walls. This more conventional but certainly no less spectacular work shares space with the playful ‘Fletcherisms’ many remember him for and makes for a jolly good afternoon of inspiring design gazing.

The exhibition runs until 3rd April
See cube.org.uk for details.

Lovely stuff.

A new “Fontier”

February 2nd, 2010

Fingers crossed sometime in the near future we will be able to take our pick of fonts and use them as live text on the websites we design. Though Arial, Verdana, Georgia etc. have served us well, the thought of being able to “Cherry” pick the right one for the job is very exciting to any type geek (of which there are a few at Cherry).

The future is not here yet, but this article typography-on-the-web gives us hope that someone is trying to make it happen!

Cherry and Lonely Planet do Bowlioke

January 22nd, 2010

Let the bowling commence...

Fun was had by all as we enjoyed a little get together with the team at Lonely Planet. The most significant news of the day is that the Cherry Kingpins remain undefeated despite a rather shakey start to the evening’s entertainment. Needless to say the karaoke inspired many moments of hilarity that have been banished to the Cherry archive forever, this way we spare our blushes and more importantly your ears! Well, maybe one clip couldn’t hurt…

Cherry and Lonely Planet show their rage from Sarah Harding on Vimeo.