Hi Tom, thank for the questions.
Looking back, I remember going through thousands of fonts on the net. I studied them all and was drawn to simple, minimal sans serif-types of letters. rounded stuff turned my head and lent itself to movement and simplicity.
I did the same thing with the name, listing thousands and finally deciding on the one, Crisp Titanium. Go figure, all that work and then I just used my last name. I remember that the battle came down to Crisp Titanium and Black Swan (It's a long, boring story).
About the frames and aesthetic, there's a lot that goes into simplicity. My influences both during and after school were modern architecture (post war, simple forms, no decorative elements). I traveled extensively in my 20's and visited landmarks of the Bauhaus movement and was specifically drawn to the work of Mies van der Rohe, Alvar Alto and Peter Behrens. When I got a real job, i found myself building things that reflected these attitudes (by chance) that reinforced this design criteria and was able to carry that philosophy into another context of objects with a smaller scale. I say somewhat smaller. I was also building window fixtures that were 6+ meters tall and glass cylinders from Holland that needed to be moved with large cranes as well as very complex (but big) elevators and display cases. Have a look here to see what I mean. Simple doesn't always mean easy:
---CLICK THIS LINK TO SEE SOME PHOTO REFERENCES---
I've always played with finishes and started media blasting the frames after I did some treatment to nickel-silver rods that we had in the fab shop. It took me a while to figure out how to make templates for the bikes as I was blasting large blocks of solid material at my previous job without any masking; it was very industrial-type of stuff. After reading a story about Leni Fried, I messed around with anodizing as you can see in this bike that I made in 2005 (i think this was the first 29er in Italy)
crisp_SP29er | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
crisp1.jpg
Here you can see a complete ti front fork anodized gold and purple. I eventually abandoned that idea as the colors become dull due to humidity/climatic conditions and I wasn't too excited about the limitations of the anodize color spectrum. I still use this treatment but only for small border treatment/text on some frames.
The headbadge is a mix of my initials, DC put in an abstract position which could be construed as two wheels in motion. Not sure if it achieves that, but that was the intention. My good friend Jeroen van den Brand from The Netherlands took that design and made it into an AutoCad template and produced the first headbadge in stainless and that's still the same one I use today.
8952136147_98e6ee379d_b.jpg
Great questions, thanks Tom!
-darren
Bookmarks