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In which Tony's alleged cure for the common hangover continues to intrigue bon viveur and inebriate Suave Gav.

 

“I think you would agree," said Suave Gav, "that passion must be the key ingredient in the creation of a quality Bavarian liqueur.” Having tasted Blutwurz, I thought a ship-load of alcohol was the key ingredient but I'd already upset this fruitcake so I wasn’t about to contradict him. “However,” he continued, “I confess my associates and I also tend to imbibe with a passion. And as the after effects are known to grow steadily worse with age, it’s fair to say we have more than a passing interest in a positive solution to the problem.”

I fell silent and Suave Gav most wisely decided to spell this little verbal enigma out. “If you were not simply pulling my leg with your mention of gastronomic wizardry resulting in a cure for over-indulgence,” he said, “I should very much like to compare notes.”

“I see,” I said. “Well, The Admiral’s your man.”

“Admiral, you say? Sea-faring sort?”

“Not really. He just grew sideburns once.”

“We all make mistakes,” he replied. “Can I suggest a kitchen confab with this chap? Purely in the interests of science, of course. Ingredients discussed, recipes exchanged, vol-au-vents optional?”

“Well, as long as we’re expanding the boundaries of scientific knowledge,” I said, “I don’t see why not.” He was delusional, but at least for a change he wasn’t a design client.

The Passion Of Suave Gav

In which Tony's alleged cure for the common hangover continues to intrigue bon viveur and inebriate Suave Gav.   “I think you would agree," said Suave Gav, "that passion must be the key ingredient in the creation of a quality Bavarian liqueur.” Having tasted Blutwurz, I thought a ship-load of alcohol was the key ingredient … Continue reading The Passion Of Suave Gav

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We took the elevator to Suave Gav’s top floor suite. The elevator appeared to be infected with cocktail jazz. When we stepped out into the lobby the cocktail jazz followed us. The infection had spread.

Suave Gav was delighted to see LaFlamme and I at his Friday night experimental chutney session and was even more delighted when we presented him with a half-empty bottle of Tequila. “We’ve been experimenting with it for a while,” said LaFlamme.

He invited us into the lounge where the cocktail jazz had taken a firm hold. Later it would require an exorcist to shift it. The room was impressive, with a billiards table and fully-stocked bar. Armstrong had his priorities right. He introduced us to his wife Ethel, and his friends Dick and Jane. Collectively the group appeared to have stepped directly out of a Doris Day movie. The men wore dress suits with bowties, Armstrong topping this ensemble with a chef’s hat and apron. The ladies wore elaborate gowns styled no later than 1959 and appeared to have reality-defying hourglass figures. Even the air seemed tinged with a technicolour haze that twinkled like the crystal chandelier above us.

“Martini,” said Armstrong, handing us stem glasses. “The breakfast of champions.”

“Hear hear,” said Dick, chewing on an olive.

“This one is a watermelon variation based on one of Jane’s original designs. I’ve been working with it for a while now. The idea was to substitute my daily sun-downer with a lighter, summery alternative and even, dare I say it, make it a little healthier with the addition of fruit. Unfortunately today my hand slipped as I was pouring the gin so all pretence of it being a health shake has gone out the window.”

“Nevertheless Gavin, old boy,” said Dick, “it’s a triumph.”

“There is a virgin version, darling,” said Ethel. “Perhaps our guests may have preferred the lighter summery alternative.”

Gavin spluttered. “Good god woman, have you lost your mind? I didn’t give up my Friday evenings to join the Temperance Society.”

The martini was delicious, although LaFlamme and I were both having difficulties with the stem glasses. We’d been working with them for several minutes but were still unsure how best to grip them. We had only ever drunk from tumblers - a practical move on our part, as The Admiral is prone to boisterousness.

Martini – The Breakfast Of Champions

We took the elevator to Suave Gav’s top floor suite. The elevator appeared to be infected with cocktail jazz. When we stepped out into the lobby the cocktail jazz followed us. The infection had spread. Suave Gav was delighted to see LaFlamme and I at his Friday night experimental chutney session and was even more … Continue reading Martini – The Breakfast Of Champions

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LeSnide had broken the record. Between the moment I met him and the moment I knew I disliked him, a mere five seconds had passed. Even the previous holder George Lyttleton had been in the room two or three minutes before I decided that, despite his stature, he was a knob of gargantuan proportions. I suppose LeSnide’s legal background was bound to make him a front-runner but I don’t think anyone could have foreseen the pace with which my disdain took hold.

Nevertheless, having accepted the commission from the Advocate General for Self-Importance to design his coat of arms, I persevered, citing all the usual graphic designer’s reasons: poverty, tedium and self-loathing. I had done what I could to incorporate the imagery LeSnide suggested but I had to remind him that a coat of arms should boil down to a very simple design and that it probably wouldn’t accommodate the heroic battle scenes he described. Nor would a self-portrait on the cross or any of the other martyrdom scenes we discussed be appropriate.

However I conceded to his request for a more modest depiction of himself carrying the world on his shoulders. Above this was his family motto, something to do with an eagle that swallowed a fly. I felt it was a reasonably successful design and looked forward to being renumerated for the effort.

When the phone rang I was almost pleased to answer it, a sure sign that I had completed a commission, but as always, this was tainted by the fear that it may herald a new one. “Mr. Boaks,” said the caller. “I’m Captain Priscilla Pantling from the Faculty of Advocates.”

“Hello, Captain,” I said. It was probably too early to start calling him Cilla.

“I’m the advocates’ clerk here,” he continued. “I’m responsible for the diaries of all the counsel members.”

“That’s tremendous,” I said. “We should diarise sometime. Was there something I can help you with?”

“Well, it concerns Lord LeSnide.”

Lord LeSnide?” I said.

“I’m not sure he really is a lord,” said Captain Pantling. “But he insists I address him so. Probably because I’m a captain.”

“Are you sure you’re a captain?” I asked. “I know a guy called The Admiral and as far as I’m aware he’s never been to sea.”

“Oh yes,” he said. “There’s no mistake.” I didn’t know how he could be so certain but he probably had a badge or something to prove it. I have a badge. It says ‘Back to Mono.’ I could be a corporal or something by now.

“It’s rather a delicate matter,” the Captain continued. “As you know, Saul LeSnide QC is one of our most eminent legal minds.”

“Yes,” I said, “he’s told me many times. And I’ve only met him twice.”

The Eagle That Swallowed A Fly

LeSnide had broken the record. Between the moment I met him and the moment I knew I disliked him, a mere five seconds had passed. Even the previous holder George Lyttleton had been in the room two or three minutes before I decided that, despite his stature, he was a knob of gargantuan proportions. I … Continue reading The Eagle That Swallowed A Fly

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I met LaFlamme at the Botanical Gardens. “It’s a fecund paradise,” she said. Her language was quite shocking at times.

We were on a furtive mission to procure a cutting from a particular herbaceous perennial, the name of which continues to escape me despite The Admiral’s repeated tellings. The Admiral had devised a highly effective hangover cure which depended on the leaves and stem of the plant. Early tests with a garden centre variety were promising until our combined inability to keep anything in a pot alive apart from fungus conspired against us, and as a consequence all three of us returned to behaving as if mornings had never been invented.

“Mental torment,” I said. “Mental torment. Mentalent. Mentalor. Mentament.”

“What are you doing?” said LaFlamme.

“This is how I remember the plant’s name,” I replied. “I start with 'Mental torment' then combine the words in different ways until I come up with the right mix. Talmanent. Talmator. Talmanentator. Talmanenta-latortator.”

“Tormentil,” said LaFlamme.

“Tormentil,” I agreed, nodding. “I would have gotten there eventually.”

“Maybe,” said LaFlamme, “but I wasn’t sure how much mental torment I could take.”

We found an uncharacteristically useful piece of graphic design in the form of a signpost which read ‘Herbaceous Perennials’ and followed a winding path on a shallow incline towards an extensive rockery. When the inclination turned steep, my own inclination was to turn back but LaFlamme was two paces ahead of me and I’d become sun-dazzled by her milky-white calves.

As we reached the top of the incline we rounded a corner and LaFlamme stopped abruptly, forcing the top of my head to collide with her back. It had long been my dream to collide with LaFlamme but this wasn’t quite what I had in mind. I peered round from behind her and saw a dapper looking man with secateurs in one hand, a cutting in the other, and on his face the guiltiest expression I’d ever seen. He too appeared to be blinded by the fullbeam effect of LaFlamme’s delicious legs and stood facing towards us in a half-turned position, not knowing whether to go the whole 180 or return to base.

“Phlobaphenes,” he said.

“Quite,” said LaFlamme. “Do you work here?”

“Yes?” he offered in a painfully hesitant whine.

“Why are you wearing a suit?”

“I try to be presentable at all times. It shows the plants due respect.”

When I stepped out from LaFlamme’s shadow, something I haven’t been able to do often, I recognised the man. “Armstrong,” he said, extending his secateurs. “Gavin.” It was Suave Gav, the frustrated gourmet and bon viveur from the Neon Emporium. “We extract phlobaphenes and triterpene alcohol from the Potentilla Erecta,” he continued. “It produces a rousing Bavarian liqueur called Blutwurz.”

It sounded implausible. Not that Tormentil could produce a rousing Bavarian liqueur, but that its Latin name was Potentilla Erecta. But it’s true. Go ahead, look it up.

“Potentilla Erecta?” said LaFlamme. “That does sound rousing. Does it have any special powers? You know, increased circulation, hot flushes, shortness of breath, panting, drooling?”

“Oh yes,” said Armstrong. “Its health benefits are well documented. A compound prepared from the roots and bark has been used to treat a number of ailments. It’s often used in herbal medicine as an astringent due to its tannin content. It also gave me a thumping great erection the last time I tried it.”

It was more than we needed to know but at least we’d found the elusive Tormentil. I was confused however. It was clearly a multitalented plant that could both cause a hangover and cure it at the same time, not to mention its other special powers. I asked Suave Gav if he was aware of its use as a morning after potion.

“Is it possible?” he gasped, gazing in wonder at the low-growing cluster of bushes before him. “Up until now I have been spellbound by its Blutwurzian gifts and concentrated on its roots alone. If the leaves and stems can be used to counter the undesirable after-effects of over-consumption of its glorious root-juice, then children we have indeed reached the promised land.”

I was sceptical. It seemed more likely The Admiral had been serving us a hair of the dog rather than a hangover cure, which would certainly account for the spring in our step on the days we tried it. But I took a cutting nonetheless as even a small hope of a hangover cure was better than none.

Since this encounter, LaFlamme has taken to calling me ‘Tormentil.’ I’m not sure if this is a good thing.

The Special Powers Of Tormentil

I met LaFlamme at the Botanical Gardens. “It’s a fecund paradise,” she said. Her language was quite shocking at times. We were on a furtive mission to procure a cutting from a particular herbaceous perennial, the name of which continues to escape me despite The Admiral’s repeated tellings. The Admiral had devised a highly effective … Continue reading The Special Powers Of Tormentil

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The Admiral showed me a new contraption he’d cobbled together from discarded pieces of circuitry and an old record player. In essence it was an alarm clock. At the specified hour, the device would spring to life, activating the turntable and lowering the stylus arm onto the record. Result – you woke up to the gentle sound of a Chopin sonata or koto music from Japan. He hadn’t tried it yet but assured me it would be 100% effective.

I doubted whether the invention would ever be commercially viable, what with its need for discarded pieces of circuitry and an old record player, but the Admiral countered that my use of the word ‘viable’ was pejorative, whatever that means.

We left his flat to find the nearest purveyor of vigorous dark ale and spent several hours testing degrees of vigour before the barman called time. At this point the Admiral stood, briefly, then sat down again. He stood a second time and buttoned his cardigan, badly, leaving an extra button dangling at the bottom. He sat down once more and suggested we try again, heartily, only this time that I should do the standing. It seemed only fair so I stood, abruptly, knocking over both chair and table and, attempting to retain a shred of diginity, blaming him.

There was a limit to how far we would get in such a condition and it was decided that, the Admiral’s flat being nearest, it would be far enough if I could reach his sofa. En route to the sofa The Admiral explained he had an early start, as he had a couple of days’ work at the hospital devising a way of keeping tags on runaway patients. He said it would be an opportunity to test his new alarm clock and were it not for runaway patients he would have no use for such a gadget.

“I’m going to make doubly sure I don’t sleep in,” said the Admiral, his last words of the evening as he set the device for 7am and left me muttering incomprehensibly about kotos.

I slept as if consigned to a morgue but was awoken by the gentle stirrings of Motorhead’s ‘Ace of Spades’ at a level likely to have been set at the Admiral's last party. It was a testament to his electronic ingenuity that the device actually worked, but it didn’t work for long as a high velocity boot was soon to be seen heading towards it from the direction of the sofa.

A Cause For Alarm

The Admiral showed me a new contraption he’d cobbled together from discarded pieces of circuitry and an old record player. In essence it was an alarm clock. At the specified hour, the device would spring to life, activating the turntable and lowering the stylus arm onto the record. Result – you woke up to the … Continue reading A Cause For Alarm

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The Admiral had explained 'twittering' to me in words of one syllable and yet I still found the concept baffling. I asked for a diagram.

Later that evening I began to explore for myself. There had to be a reason for the popularity of this typing-based pastime and I was determined to find it.

I arrived at the conclusion that the world was in the grip of typing-induced delirium, because after several hours spent amongst all this random keyboard spawn, I was unable to find any actual writing.

I was also finding it difficult to see the possible attraction in following the nonsensical ramblings of strangers when I could barely follow my own.

But just when I was about to give up on the idea altogether and slide into coma-level apathy, I stumbled upon a correspondent by the oddly familiar name of @Spore, who was about to change my opinion altogether.

Twitter: The Typing Sickness

The Admiral had explained 'twittering' to me in words of one syllable and yet I still found the concept baffling. I asked for a diagram. Later that evening I began to explore for myself. There had to be a reason for the popularity of this typing-based pastime and I was determined to find it. I … Continue reading Twitter: The Typing Sickness

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Even though the Admiral was using a mobile phone rather than a keyboard, I still felt that he was essentially typing. But he took issue with this, insisting he was neither typing nor texting, but in fact 'twittering.'

"Twittering?" I queried. "Not typing?"

"Hmm."

"Not texting?"

"That's right. It's when you describe in 140 characters or less what you are doing. Let me give you an example." He began poking at the device. "Going to meet my colleague, the eminent psychologist Lydia Pine-Coffin." He looked pleased with this.

"But you're not. You're typing."

"Well yes, but you misunderstand. It's about social networking, it's about micro blogging."

"It's about typing." I took the device and punched in the following letters: 'hav just stuffd my armdillo and now thinkng tacos for brekfst.' I showed him this marvellous piece of prose. "Typing."

"You're being childish now," he scolded. "Deliberately obtuse."

"Bum bum bum," I retaliated, deciding to stick with childish rather than have to look up obtuse. "You don't need 140 characters to describe what you're doing. Just write 'typing.'"

But it seemed the Admiral was far from alone. Most people's list of hobbies would be headed with 'typing' if they ever dared admit it. Maybe it was like going to the bathroom - I enjoy my rest breaks but I wouldn't necessarily class them as a hobby.

More Joy Of Typing

Even though the Admiral was using a mobile phone rather than a keyboard, I still felt that he was essentially typing. But he took issue with this, insisting he was neither typing nor texting, but in fact 'twittering.' "Twittering?" I queried. "Not typing?" "Hmm." "Not texting?" "That's right. It's when you describe in 140 characters … Continue reading More Joy Of Typing

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I went to visit the Admiral hoping he might be able to explain the Da Vinci Code to me in semaphore or some other language I might understand. I felt the story may help me solve the mystery behind the worst logo in the world, but I wasn't so committed to the idea that I would read all 600 pages myself.

I found the Admiral in typical pose, hunched over some miniscule technical device, poking and prodding, his milk-bottle glasses growing thicker by the hour.

But it turned out this wasn't another piece of his electronic fiddling. He was texting, and the miniscule device was in fact a phone.

It was difficult to see how this gadget could be dialled by anyone outside Lilliput, and this gave rise to my theory that either phones were shrinking or my hands were expanding at an alarming rate.

And just when I was getting to my next question - how could a form of typing ever become so popular? - the Admiral dropped a bombshell. He wasn't typing. He was 'twittering.'

The Joy Of Typing

I went to visit the Admiral hoping he might be able to explain the Da Vinci Code to me in semaphore or some other language I might understand. I felt the story may help me solve the mystery behind the worst logo in the world, but I wasn't so committed to the idea that I … Continue reading The Joy Of Typing

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So today it was just me and my shaky design skills. I avoided all the usual distractions: email, phone, Mongol hordes at the door. I had to break the spell of the blank canvas syndrome, which had so crippled me over the last few days.

I received a fax from my client Ignacious Spore. I'm not sure how, because I don't have a fax machine. It read ‘Are you up yet?' There was no escape.

I began to study the worst logo in the world - a simple monogram of the letters ‘IS' in a relative of Helvetica. Spore had limited imagination. The bold forms of the letters twisted and turned in my mind, and seconds evolved into minutes which became hours.

Eventually I could only see the monogram as a word. The word ‘is'. In the intensity of my concentration the word began to take on a mystical form. It was zen-like in its beauty and simplicity. Maybe this was the religious symbology that Spore was referring to.

Maybe in fact it wasn't the worst logo in the world. Maybe it was brilliant. Maybe it was like the ‘fcuk' logo - it was so appalling it had to be genius.

Just The Fax

So today it was just me and my shaky design skills. I avoided all the usual distractions: email, phone, Mongol hordes at the door. I had to break the spell of the blank canvas syndrome, which had so crippled me over the last few days. I received a fax from my client Ignacious Spore. I'm … Continue reading Just The Fax

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You may be wondering what all this has to do with graphic design. Well so am I. But what does anything have to do with anything nowadays? I mean, I bought the Da Vinci Code thinking it had something to do with literature, and where did that get me? I'll tell you - page five.

The fact is it was graphic design that got us into this mess. My client Spore had asked me to analyse the worst logo in the world for its religious symbology, and rather than shatter his belief that I studied the subject at Harvard, I accepted the commission. It had been a lean month.

Having taken the problem first to possible genius the Admiral, who pondered it at length before getting sidetracked trying to split the internet, and then to Fifi LaFlamme, whose sherry-like substances left me giddy but no further forward, it seemed I had exhausted all the routes open to me.

There was only one thing left and it was a nightmare scenario. I was going to have to actually do some work.

What Does All This Have To Do With Graphic Design?

You may be wondering what all this has to do with graphic design. Well so am I. But what does anything have to do with anything nowadays? I mean, I bought the Da Vinci Code thinking it had something to do with literature, and where did that get me? I'll tell you - page five. … Continue reading What Does All This Have To Do With Graphic Design?

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All text and images are copyright Greg Moodie. Do not use without express permission.