
Tim Bruce, art
director at Chicagobased
Lowercase, Inc.,
emphasized the written
word over other
images in the Writers’
Theatre’s literary magazine
WT
The inspiration for
WT magazine came
from vintage theater
programs and the
theater itself, says
Bruce. These mockups
were rejected because
of their size and inconsistency
with the intimacy
of the theater.
The designer was
partial to one of the
early tabloid-size
comps, but when the
client said it also didn’t
match the theater’s
intimate personality, he
had to agree.
How often do you find yourself limited by budgets?
Too often, right? By putting your imagination to
work, you can find solutions to budget problems
where you least expect them. Each of the four projects
featured here was accomplished with limited
resources, yet each is powerful and effective.
By allowing yourself the freedom to think big,
adding a little ingenuity and extra effort, you can
come up with a way to invest your ideas with impact
far beyond audience expectations. And you just may
find you have a client for life.
Putting limits to work
“The Writers’ Theatre in Chicago was looking for a
way to increase the connection between its subscribers
and the theater,” says Tim Bruce, art director
of Chicago-based Lowercase, Inc. “They wanted
to extend the experience beyond attending performances.
We determined that a literary-driven magazine
would help the patrons understand the works
being presented, as well as the theater’s approach to
that work. We also noted that this would be a good
way to keep everyone familiar with the breadth and
depth of programs being developed.”
Lowercase had limited resources for images and
limited time to deliver the finished product. Bruce’s
strategy was to focus on images he could make work
no matter what their level of quality; this led to an
emphasis on black-and-white visuals and two-color
printing. “Pretty early on, we made two design decisions,”
Bruce says. “One, we were always going to
print in two-color, and two, we had a range of image
quality that we couldn’t control, so we had to find a
way to make that imagery interesting as well as practical
from a production standpoint. On one hand, it
allows you to mask some of the weaker images, and it
also allows you to take inconsistent imagery and tie it
together so it seems like it’s all from one place.”
As a recurring publication, WT magazine employs
a number of design elements that hold each
issue together and establish a consistent identity: the
two-color approach, size, masthead, grid, table of
contents, and typography.

Bruce had several
images of varying
quality, so he made
everything black
and white. To tie the
images together, he
cross-processed them.