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Bovine Pyroglyphics

The 1872 Brands Act required Australian stock owners to mark their beasts with a registered brand to avoid a fifty-pound penalty. Born from a need for ownership identification, where cattle theft was an unexpected factor of colonial expansion, cattle brands challenged conventional letter shapes. Handcrafted by blacksmiths, iron letterforms conveyed legible but cryptic coded messages. Characters defy traditional typography rules with irregular tilting, connecting, or reversing, establishing a unique brand language initiated from proprietary constraints in the cattle industry. Our assumption is that the context of crafting shapes positioned at the end of an implement for marking hides necessitated the measured approach taken by John Davis of Marian Street Redfern to ensure differentiation in each letterform.

The contravention demanding legibility from a distance produces beautiful inconsistency. It is also what makes this typeface so unique. Known as Queensland Brand Designs, the typeface evokes convergence with cultural crafting, where breaking rules was consistent with the rake of early colonial Australia. Here, we present three storylines: 1) the messy history surrounding colonial ownership; 2) the unexpected whimsy in the ‘needs must’ design context where legibility and utility is king; and 3) how to craft a contemporary version of Davis’ font that restores its local significance.

This presentation contexualises the Branding Irons and Blockchains workshop by Troy Leinster and Clint Harvey. Their workshop presents Leinster’s reinterpretation of the Queensland Brand Design as the next step in developing Australian Brand typefaces, where handcrafted letterpress techniques meet digitality. We study the awkwardness of the Brands type and its unashamedly unique raison d’etre. The narrative expressed here celebrates the harmonious convergence of artistry and innovation in how we approach bovine pyroglyphics from a letterpress workshop perspective, told through a historical lens tinted with the notion of possession in the way humans exact ownership of beasts.

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Speaker

Dzintra Menesis

Artist, printmaker and designer, Dzintra Menesis is presently pursuing her master's degree in Creative Industries with JMC Academy. Her creative practice blends traditional printmaking techniques with graphic design, a fusion deeply influenced by her affinity for nature and human empathy. Life-centred at its core, Dzintra’s curiosity for fresh perspectives on all things underpins her knowledge of design and its impact on local and global humanity. Storytelling via connection is her passion.

Speaker

Melissa Silk

Drawing on more than thirty years of education and creative practice, Melissa collaborates with many thinkers and makers to design experiences that embed the Arts in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEAM). Melissa heads the Design department of JMC Academy nationally, while also co-director of STEAMpop.zone. Actively engaged in research contributing to transdisciplinary models of learning, she develops robust curricula that champions design education for preferred futures. Melissa enjoys being part of a bold community of creatives intent on developing, designing and sharing unique learning experiences for everybody.

Speaker

Thida Sachathep

Thida Sachathep is a seasoned UX expert with over a decade of experience in the design industry. Melding expertise in user-centred design with interactive strategies, Thida has developed a deep understanding of user behaviour and needs. As a Senior Lecturer at JMC Academy and a long-time academic at the University of Sydney, Thida continues to share her knowledge and experience with the next generation of UX designers. Her published research on ethical considerations of UX design processes receives much praise from industry experts.