Friday, October 14, 2011

Jonathan Mak Long and Chris Thornley ( Apple tribute logo a Web hit )



Jonathan Mak Long Design
Chris Thornley Design


Jonathan Mak Long Chris Thornley, In the early hours after spending last week Steve Jobs, a silhouette image of the founder of Apple placed inside the Apple logo from appearing on Twitter.

In the morning, a Reuters report gave credit to Hong Kong design student Jonathan Mak, but in recent days, several other artists have also claimed responsibility for the design.

That includes the UK-based graphic artist Chris Thornley, also known as Raid71 and resident of Los Angeles Farzin Adeli.

Thornley said he created the picture in May, while Adeli said he created in the first hours after the death of Jobs. But while Mak Thornley and appear to have recognized that it was likely a coincidence rather than an outright scam, Adeli has submitted an application for copyright of the image, the San Jose Mercury News reports.

“I personally created and designed the logo graphic on the evening of Wednesday October 5, after hearing the sad news of the death of Steve Jobs,” Adeli said the paper.

In a blog post, Mak did not refer to claims Adeli, but said the image of Thornley in effect, “contain the same idea,” as the creation of Mak. Mak, however, said it was stolen, and argued that he searched the web before posting your picture just to make sure that nobody else had done before, but found the contribution of Thornley.

“The visual connection between the profile of Steve and logo seemed too obvious to not have been captured at the time. Turns out I’m right,” he wrote Mak.

Mak said he did not apologize for “pulling” Thornley, because “I have come to this design on my own.” He, however, apologize for not responding sooner. He then asked people to contribute to a charity set up by Thornley, who is currently battling cancer.

In a tweet, Thornley said he “has nothing against [Mak], it happens all the time, he has been very good about it.”

“I started selling the image [above] on my website months charity is setting all the money goes to cancer charity,” he continued.

Ironically, Adeli is also selling the image and the proceeds will go to pancreatic cancer research.

As Techdirt points out, however, the debate could be up to three artists. “I guess Apple could void any attempt to register the intellectual property claims of these guys. I can not see how a claim gets anywhere brand like Apple, obviously, I could say that attacks Apple’s existing brands and would be a serious risk of confusion, “said the blog. Real jobs are also likely to engage in the use of his image.

source:http://usspost.com/jonathan-mak-long-chris-thornley-43247/


Apple tribute logo a Web hit
By Claudine Zap

When Steve Jobs resigned from Apple in August, 7,000 miles away in Hong Kong, graphic design student Jonathan Mak Long, "shocked" by the CEO's departure, did what he knew best: He created a design to honor the Apple co-founder.

The 19-year-old posted the image, the Apple logo with the bite changed to a profile of Jobs, to his Tumblr blog. Known as Jonathan Mak, he initially received about 80 notes on the image. Then word came this past Wednesday that Jobs had died, after a long battle with cancer. Mak reposted the homage, which this time caught fire on the Web, attracting an almost immediate response of 10,000 likes and reblogs on his Tumblr site and surging to 180,000 -- in one day. Comments included "awesome invention like steve jobs." One thought it should be the "new Apple logo." Another wanted to "use it as a tattoo."

Speaking in fluent English (which he said he learned from watching the TV show "Friends"), the Polytechnic University School of Design student told Yahoo! in a Skype interview that the image was a tribute to Jobs's contributions to the world: "I wanted to commemorate him. He's such an integral part of Apple. I thought it would be fitting to include him in the Apple logo." Long added, "With Jobs gone, Apple is literally missing a piece."

The artist was inspired by the uncompromising personality of the creative genius. He said of Jobs: "He had this vision that he was not afraid to commit to. That's how he broke new ground. His commitment and belief in himself is what inspire me." The designer's vision for his own work is an aesthetic that joins a simple graphic element with a richer meaning, giving the viewer, as he put it, an "a-ha moment."

The cyber tribute that became a hit, and along with attracting media attention, the logo found itself as the preferred profile pic on Ashton Kutcher's Twitter account and on merchandise featured on eBay. While the design prodigy has received several job offers, but he hasn't acted on them; "I'm still a student," he said. The artist has a portfolio of minimalist design, but don't call him an Apple fanboy. "I just got my first MacBook Pro a year ago," he admitted -- and he still doesn't own an iPhone.

Asked whether he'd gotten any response from Apple, Mak said he had emailed CEO Tim Cook but so far hadn't heard back.

source:http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/apple-tribute-logo-hit-202848951.html

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