Friday, April 30, 2010

Logo and Demographics

Here are the writings for my section of the group justifications. I would like some feedback if anybody thinks I should change or add something.

LOGO

When designing the Strange Range logo it was important to highlight the personality of the brand to produce an authentic identity. Strange Range is a craft beer made locally in Colorado that appeals to the middle-class "everyday" Coloradan adventurist. With satirical humor geared towards the stereotypical Coloradan, Strange Range highlights the usefulness of their products in specific Colorado survival situations. The logo was designed to have a hand made crafted look to it because the product is hand made craft beer. The particular aesthetic was chosen to highlight the typical Colorado landforms and playful attitude of the brand. From the typography to the mountains, everything in the logo was hand made. The authentic typography can only be found in our logo, which helps to differentiate Strange Range from the competition. The typography is also a bit unusual for a logo because the word Range is read from right to left instead of left to right. This choice helps to lend itself to the brand name. There needed to be something "strange" about the logo to highlight our satirical and fun personality. The mountains in the logo were used because the iconic symbol of Colorado is the Rocky Mountains. This helps to position us as a Colorado handcrafted beer. The logo works well in black and white and in color. This allows it to have durability because it can be used in many situations ranging from the production of packaging and swag to the implementation of it on the website and motion pieces.

DEMOGRAPHIC

In order to define Strange Range's demographic it is crucial to first look at the beer drinking demographics within the United States. According to the brewer's handbook written by Ted Goldammer, beer-drinking demographics within the United States is male dominated. Goldammer explains that 80% of all of the beer consumed is attributed to male consumption. In addition, a large number of the males are primarily white. The business of micro-brews is booming. According to the article, Market Research and Advertising by Kent Wolfe he states, "Micro brewed consumers consume an average of $250 worth of beer annually. Younger people were more likely to have tried a microbrew. 36% of beer drinkers between the ages of 25 and 34 had tried a microbrew. In contrast, 27% of beer drinkers between the ages 34 through 45 and 20% of those 45 and older had tried microbrews." From this information it is clear that not only are microbrews popular, they reach a demographic of a younger adult. Microbrews also tend to be a little more expensive than mass-produced beer so we will have to target the middle class white American males and females. There also needs to be a focus on the local and unique qualities in our beer that attracts a person to our brand because of its familiarity. We need to create a local identity for our brand that attaches with it a sense of place. It needs to look and feel like Colorado.

Geographer Wes Flack has hypothesized, "that the growth of microbreweries is a prime illustration of a movement termed ‘neo-localism’ in which people are attempting to reconnect with the local, the personal and the unique." In the article, Microbreweries as tools of Local Identity, Steven M. Schnell and Joseph F. Reese define neo-localism as the active, conscious creation and maintenance of attachment to place. They go on to say that microbreweries are still on the rise partly because, "people in small ways are attempting to reclaim a sense of place and a distinct landscape in the face of our globalizing economy." Microbreweries provide a diverse array of ales that can be found nowhere else, creating a truly unique experience. Based on the above research Strange Range will be targeting its marketing efforts towards a dominated white male demographic. The particular demographic focus is on those white males who range from ages 24-39. The typical Strange Range customer will live in the city and play in the mountains. They can be defined as the middle-class weekend warrior who appreciates a good craft beer and enjoys the typical outdoor Colorado activities such as hiking, camping, fishing, biking, skiing and snowboarding.

When considering our approach to marketing to this specific Colorado demographic we must consider archetypes in our process. By choosing the right archetypes for our brand, it will help us to understand the dynamics of the category our brand operates in as well as help to connect our brand emotionally to our consumers. The archetypes that are consistent with our brand essence are the Jester and the explorer. The jester archetype is characterized as being fun, original and irreverent. True jester brands help us really live life in the present and allow us to be impulsive and spontaneous and they help people to have a good time. The explorer is characterized by being independent, adventurous and daring and represents self-discovery, trial and challenge. With our outdoor survival twist this archetype is also relevant to our brand.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Final Labels

All of the labels are now up on dropbox. Let me know if you would like any changes.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/49683666@N06/

Our Flickr Photostream

Motion Team's Blog

We set up our own blog to post progress and whatnot.

http://strangerangemotion.blogspot.com/

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Sunday, April 25, 2010

iphone app

Here's the link to the iphone app. http://jessicamcwilliams.com/iphone/

It won't look right on the computer unless you view it in Safari. View it on your iphone or android phone. I have a LONG way to go but I'm uploading every so often. So be gentle on me right now. It'll get a lot better.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Survival Tips

Snake Bite Wit


MIA IPA


Incline Abbey


Frostbite Pale Ale


Bear Attack Porter


These files are all in dropbox too.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Beer Bottle


In case anyone wanted to see what the bottle was looking like, here's Jake's design wrapped around that 3D bottle Dan found. I think it looks pretty sweet.

Newsletter Content/Events

Denver’s Spring Beer and Gear Festival

This year’s festival will be held at the Colorado Convention Center and partnered with REI to present the largest indoor beer and gear festival.This is the first time that Strange Range Brewery will have all of our beer available. Free beer samples will be given away throughout the entire event. Lots of swag will be given away at the door including a raffle at the end of the night for a free dinner at the only Gourmet restaurant in a Yurt, http://www.tennesseepass.com/cookhouse.htm.


4th of July Beer Bash

Join us at Janet’s Cabin Hut at the top of Copper Mountain for an epic 4th of July BBQ. http://www.huts.org/hut_details/janet_hut_details.html The BBQ starts at 10 am and runs through the night. Participants are welcome to bring tents and camp outside at the hut. Everyone is encouraged to bring the appropriate gear in case of inclimate weather. Trail maps will be provided at the base of Copper Mountain. Colorado’s famous outdoorsman Bob Crenshaw will demonstrate survival techniques such as how to start a fire and what is edible in Colorado’s backwoods.

Strange Range Brewery and Pub

The original Strange Range Brewery and Pub is located in historic downtown LODO in Denver. This is the original brewery and a popular restaurant known for its special beer burgers and stout carrot cake. Open late into the night on the weekends where local bands are showcased every weekend. The menu ranges from all you can eat fish and chips for $7 to our famous fillet burger for $25. If lucky, customers are asked to taste test experimental brews!

Survival Tips

Survival Tip #18: Lost in the woods. 1) Drink all of your Strange Range beer while saving the bottle caps in a small satchel. 2) Search for other lost hikers. 3) Form a mountainous tribe with said hikers and use bottle caps as currency. 4) As you were the only one who thought to save your bottle caps assume the role of supreme ruler and unleash your minions to do your bidding.

Survival Tip #19: Dissuade an Approaching Bear. 1) Don't run. 2) Take your pack off of your back and pull out a Strange Range beer. 3) Toss the beer on the ground in between you and the bear and slowly back away. The bear will be far more interested in our attractive beer label than your $400 synthetic microfiber jacket. 4) While the beer is distracted sneak downwind of the animal and prepare for a flank attack.

Survival Tip #20: Lost in the woods. 1) Drink a Strange Range beer. Save the bottle cap. 2) Use the cap's reflective inner finish to blind the pilots of passing helicopters. 3) Once the chopper is down locate and retrieve emergency flares from the crash site. 4) Use flares to signal for help.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Descriptions/Tips/About/Tag Lines

BEER DESCRIPTIONS

First draft of descriptions for each beer. Used similar format as on Breckenridge Brewery's site. Most of the specific details (flavor, yeast, malts, etc...) are simply copied and pasted from there too. So we can possibly tweak them some more to make them more unique.

MIA IPA

This is an ale to help you get back on track. It goes down clean and refreshing while keeping it’s true IPA heritage. This well-balanced and soulful ale will give you the push you need to get you headed in the right direction.
Beer Style: American India Pale Ale

Flavor: Nice forefront, hop bitterness with underlying malt character
Yeast: Top Fermented Ale Yeast
Malts: Two Row Pale, Munich, Carmel, Torrified Wheat
Hops: Amarillo, Magnum, Perle, Cascade, Apollo, Fuggle, Goldings
Color: Spun Gold
Bitterness Units: 68
Alcohol By Volume: 6.2%
Alcohol By Weight: 5%

Bear Attack Porter

This ale has all the chocolate and roasted nut flavor of a classic Porter. It’s rich and dark and it’s comforting like snuggling up with big black bear. Unless the bear’s idea of snuggling is ripping off your leg… then we suggest you grab your beer and run.

Beer Style: Herb and Spice Beer
Flavor: Smooth roasted chocolate with a roasted hazelnut finish.
Yeast: Top Fermenting Ale Yeast
Malts: Two Row Pale, Caramel, Chocolate, Black, Roasted Barley
Hops: Chinook, Tettinang, Perle, Goulding
Color: Deep Brown
Bitterness Units: 16
Alcohol ByVolume: 4.7%

Snake Bite Wit

This wheat beer accentuates the zesty wit or white beers of Europe. It is brewed with orange peel spicing to give it a combination of both citrus and sour flavors which give the beer a real bite. This surprising bite can be said to mimic a snake bite. Fast and shocking, though probably not as painful.

Beer Style: Organic Wheat Beer
Flavor: Light, refreshing, yet interesting
Yeast: American Wheat
Malts: Pale, White Wheat, Torrified Wheat, Carapils, Caramel, Munich
Hops: Fuggle, Cascade, Willamette
Color: Golden Opaque
Bitterness Units: 9
Alcohol By Volume: 4.2%
Alcohol By Weight: 3.36%

Frostbite Pale Ale

This American pale ale is brewed at bone-chillingly cold temperatures. It is our spin on the classic pale ale. Crafted with plenty of pale and Munich malts and an avalanche of hops. Brewed cold, stored cold and served cold, this pale ale could give you frostbite.

Beer Style: American Pale Ale
Flavor: Moderate maltiness with sweet floral hop character
Yeast: Top Fermenting Ale Yeast
Malts: Two Row Pale, Munich, Caramel
Hops: Perle, Wilamette, Bramling, Fuggle, Czech Saaz
Color: Deep Golden
Bitterness Units: 40
Alcohol By Volume: 5.7%
Alcohol By Weight: 4.56%

Incline Abbey

This beer is a Belgian dubbel brewed with six different malts. It is bottle-conditioned, weighs in at 7.5% alcohol by volume, and provides just the right motivation to get you through any uphill struggle.

Beer Style: Belgian Dubbel
Flavor: Caramel Nut Maltiness
Yeast: Bavarian Lager
Malts: Two Row Pale, Munich, Bonlander, Caramel, Carapils, Black
Hops: Strisselspalt, Chinook
Color: Mahogany
Bitterness Units: 16
Alcohol ByVolume: 7.5%
Alcohol ByWeight: 6.0%

SURVIVAL TIPS

Ideas for the tips we'd give on the back of the bottles. Already had the bear attack one. Came up with one for snakebite wit. Need help coming up with ideas for the others though...

Bear Attack Porter

“How to survive a bear attack”
1. Locate beer
2. Remove single bottle
3. Break on rock
4. Use as weapon

Snake Bite Wit

“Dealing with snake bites”
1. Do not elevate. Keep the bite below the level of your heart
2. If you are bitten on your beer drinking arm:
3. Be sure to drink beer with other arm to avoid elevating bite above heart
4. Drink beer to relax while waiting for antivenom


ABOUT STRANGE RANGE

First draft of a kind of intro to the company. Possibly used on home page as an introduction.

Here at Strange Range we understand the importance of having a good beer to take with you on your adventures or activities in the Rocky Mountains. We also understand that even the most experienced outdoorsperson can run into trouble out in the wilderness. With both those understandings in mind, we created a line of beers that you can take with you into the mountains and that serve as a survival guide when you run into trouble.
Whether it’s a bear encounter on your hike, frostbite while snowboarding or a landslide while peeing in the woods, Strange Range is your survival tool for all situations.

TAG LINES

These are some ideas for tag lines. I put a star next to the couple I thought were better.

With every danger comes a fine beer

Brewed with you in mind

Always there, when danger shows up

Helping you through any sticky situation

Always there, when things get strange

When dangers range from small to strange *

Survival never tasted so good *

For every danger, there’s a strange solution

The outdoorsman’s brew

Because every outdoorsman needs a map in one hand and a beer in the other

Survival is different in a strange range

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Site Shell

The web site now exists on my server. The only thing up so far is the product navigation, which functions but the styling is pending designs from Ron, Alex, and the Motion Group.

Our site home is located here:
http://www.andyjepkes.com/projects/strange_range/

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Web Fonts

Here's the tutorial I used to verify converting a fonts to a svg file works, http://wiki.github.com/sorccu/cufon/about.

In order for it t utilize advanced selectors or work in the latest browsers it needs sizzle.js http://sizzlejs.com/

If we wanted to use a custom font for the site we can. I like to use a standard web font for the majority of content but it might be nice to have a custom fonts for a header or someplace special.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Refined Logos



The illustrator file for these is in dropbox.

Beer Names

The names of the beers we decided on:


(3 main ones)
MIA IPA
Bear Attack Porter
Snake Bite Whit

(2 other ones)
Frostbite Pale Ale
Incline Abbey

Yeah!

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Group 1

Merchandise Swag - Elliott or anyone else
Poster - Jake
Newsletter - Jessica
Taglines - everyone
Copy - everyone
Facebook - Elliott
MySpace - Jake
iPhone App - Jessica
Embed Fonts on website - Jessica

Gmail account and such...

We have a gmail account:

strangerangebrewery@gmail.com

Password is bearattack


Used it to create the facebook page and twitter page.
Linked these together so that facebook updates appear as tweets.

Twitter user name is strangerange
Password is bearattack

We can use this e-mail in the website as a contact e-mail.
And any other uses that need an e-mail address.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Illustrative Ideas

Here are three examples of styles I think we could use as inspiration for Strange Range.

The eyes on this one remind me of our mountain man. Our label wouldn't be quite as bright, though.


I like how clean this one is.


I think the Dead Guy aesthetic also works.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

beer names

Are we still posting 5 names for beers? Here's mine.

MIA IPA
Conundrum Ale
Positioning Porter
Trekkers Stout
Wandering Wheat

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Modified DSI (first attempt)

Okay so after talking with Andy and looking through everything else it seems most of our stuff in the overview is pretty on track and might not be worth the time spent to write it today. I did feel the dsi was a bit off (not so much the information but the way it was worded and thus how we read, understand and apply it). Please let me know if this rendition resonates more and hopefully refocuses our direction better. Again it is a lot of the same information as the original but reading it this way might be the aspect we need to be all on the same page.

DSI
Strange Range is the only survival craft beer in Colorado. Utilitarian packaging, funny and satirical personality, and relate-ability to our customers will position Strange Range to capture an untapped market of the "everyday" person who adventures in the mountains of Colorado.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Blog Updates

Okay, I modified the blog to make it a little more useful.

In the top right you will see the new pages section. That is where you can find the brand overview and the project schedule. I re-posted the exact overview that summarizes the outcome of our class discussion where our brand idea was created. Instead of having Dan re-write the whole thing, read over it and comment on the areas that are unclear to you. Then we can modify it as needed.

At the bottom of the schedule page you will find a link where you can go in and modify the spreadsheet. Each group will be responsible for updating their schedule. 

Motion Group Schedule

April 13th- Rough Boards/Audio Ideas/ Script Due
April 15th- Final Boards/ Audio/ Script Due
April 22nd- All Roughs Due
May 4th- Finals Ready for Tweaking
May 6th- Final Deliverable's Due

Monday, April 5, 2010

Dropbox (info)

Just so you all know you should use copy and paste from dropbox because if you just drag and drop the file it removes it from the shared folder. Just sharing this info because I see stuff being deleted accidentally because people are accessing the files.

A little inspiration

Found this today and thought it was relevant to what we are doing

http://www.thedenveregotist.com/news/local/2010/april/5/colorado-native-lager-packaging-tenfold-collective

Schedule

Hey everyone,

Have we started thinking out our schedules yet? If I remember right that is due tomorrow as well.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

We have a winner!

Strange Range is our official Brewery name.

Let get this thing rolling ahah.

End of Voting

Soo only 6 people voted for some reason and I was realllly hoping we would get even one more that would possibly break the tie.


Results:
Strange Range x2
Bare x2
Colorado Calamity x1
Out of Bounds x1

Company name vote (Round 2)



View Results here

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Vote

Thank's for taking care of the voting process, Dan. My favorite names so far are:
Broken Compass
Calamity
Bewilderness
Alpine Alert
City Limit

Names

Utility
Hidden Trail
Last Ditch
Crevasse
Old Stone
Clutch
Stomping Ground
Life Line
Wilderness Medicine
Flatfoot Brew

Okay so I may end up not using facebook as it seems like I can make one using some google docs magic. I'm going to double check that everyone has submitted ideas then make a poll and see if it works for you all.

Dropbox Stuffs

Thanks Dan! Just upped my stuff to the folder. Let me know if anyone needs any other files from me.

Name Ideas

Base Camp
Backwoods
Fourteener (14er)
Lost Hiker
Yurt Hopper
Powder Day
Clumsy Climber
Yard Sale (skiing term)
Buried Boarder
Beer Garden

Update about voting.

Okay so if found a useful app. on Facebook that lets us post polls all in one place so we can continue to use this group page for any votes we need to conduct.

Add Dan Allan to your friends list on facebook and ill shoot you guys out an invite to the group. I already have Elliot, Alex and Ron on friends so those 3 don't need to do this.

Dropbox

I have setup a dropbox folder and I apologize that it took this long to set it up just been was away from my computer all day yesterday. If anyone doesn't get an email to join the folder let me know (give it a few as I just sent it out not to long ago) I'll have my list of names up shortly and will be looking into the voting websites right now.

Names

Alpenglow brewing co

Out of bounds Brewing co

Steep and Deep Brewery

Rockytop Brewing co

Mystic Mountain Brewery

Plight Brewery

Excursion Brewing co

Stumbler Brewing co

Rambler Brewery

Traverse Brewing co

Here is what I was thinking about names. We really need to come to a decision about the name asap. If any of my designs are going to be good I need time to develop them.

This is how I propose to do this. Each person pick 3 to 5 of their favorite names from all of the lists before 8PM tonight. The name that appears the most out of the 3 to 5 picked will be our name.

We could do this all weekend if there is no format to it. If anybody else has a better idea I would love to hear it.

Also what is the deal with the dropbox thing?


Names

I’m not feel my creative juices flowing right now, so I’ll just comment on what I like.

I liked Elliott’s “Colorado Calamity” a lot.

Also, “Bare Beer” could be fun too.

As a side note, we can probably use a ton of these and attach them to an individual flavor of beer.

Again, these were the few I came up with:

Snakebite Stout
Poison Ivy Porter
Avalanche Ale (already been used though)

Friday, April 2, 2010

10 Brand Names

Bewildered or Bewilderness Brewery
Bind
Reckless Range
Hindered Hilltop
Wicked Wilderness
Wandering Wilderness
Misfortune Mountain
Boneheaded Peaks
Detrimental Dayhiker
Catastrophic Climber

Brand Names

Bare or Bare Beer or Bare Brew
-a play on the word Beer and shows that the beer is organic. Tagline could be, “You just need the Bare essentials.”
Mystic Mountain Malt
Mighty Malts
Backcountry Bandage
Jackeling Jackalope
Wilderness Wanderer
Hermit’s Hut Brewery
Timberline
Hunter’s Prize
Mountaineer
Geonaut

10 Company Name Ideas

- Alpine Alert Brewery
- Elevated Brewing Co
- Strange Range Brewing
- Backpacker's Brewery
- Cragsman Brewing Co
- Absent Ambler Brewery
- Gadabout Brewing
- Wayward Trekker Brewery
- Colorado Calamity Brewing Co
- Mountain Mishap Brewery

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Company Names

Ourea (greek god of the mountains)
Titanium
Boron (hardest element)
Ranger
Goliath
Zenith
Payoff
39 degrees
Surveyor
Continental

Brand names

I had already thought out a few names, so here are some of the better ones that I think could work.

Broken Compass (Thinking, drunk outdoorsman)
Double Compass
Landlubber
Urban Scout
City Limit
Day Pack
Satchel
Üburb (Über + Suburbanite = burb who seeks adventure)
Ready-Brew
ShoeBoot (like merrells, every Coloradan has a pair)

Part 1 – Overview

Due Saturday morning – 10 company names
Also, you have to comment on other peoples name choices. If we have no input from the group this won’t work.

We all should think about taglines, products, and how our designs work with our brand.

Style Groups for this weekend.

Colors
Tyler
Ron

Type
Jessica
Andy

Logo
Alex
Matt
Dan

Illustrative Styles
Elliott
Jake