I especially
like designing beers that help new craft beer fans ease into the craft beer scene and enjoy it.
Not exact matches
It looks
like it was
designed by a Commodore 64 plotting out... a flowchart of the
beer's production?
Studio3877 architect David Shove - Brown worked with materials
like reclaimed wood, corrugated metal and industrial light fixtures to
design a space that complements the brewery (which is located in the warehouse), effectively shining the focus on the
beer.
If you told me to
design the perfect restaurant — the kind of place where guests would stay all day — it'd look something
like this: There'd be an oyster bar off to one side where you could chase half a dozen local varieties with an ice - cold Rainier
beer.
The
design that Pillinger and his colleagues came up with, «on the back of the proverbial
beer mat» at a bar in Toulouse, looks
like a pocket watch — a three - foot - wide pocket watch.
Take a look around and if you
like the girls in a particular bar (Amy's 69 Bar has the nicest
design and the highest number of girls, but there are other, smaller bars, with a nicer atmosphere), sit down and order a
beer.
The
design language — which Studio Temp describes as «some crazy art direction» — comes alive
like a sort of Tumblr IRL, creating combinations of words, images, colours, typefaces and visual quirks that are far removed from the conventions of «
beer» imagery.
Its containment dome, allegedly
designed to capture any underwater spillage, was «crushed
like a
beer can» under ordinary conditions.