You don’t say

“You need to get out more, girl.”

– What jazz musician Esperanza Spalding said to Greteman Group’s Carol Farrow when Farrow told Spalding her Orpheum Theatre concert this week was one of the best she’d ever seen

Arts Council teams with city and Wichita Downtown Development Corp. to create new Final Friday campaign to boost art sales

WICHITA — Final Friday is a popular monthly art crawl for some, but the Arts Council wants to make sure it makes business sense, too.

Final Friday attracts about 4,000 people monthly, which the Council says boosts area restaurants and retail shops, but that doesn’t always translate to support for artists.

“We know there’s already a lot of attention out there for Final Friday, but we want to take it to the next step up,” says Ann Keefer, who sits on the Council’s board and is vice president of marketing for the Wichita Downtown Development Corp.

The Council, the WDDC and the city are teaming for a new campaign to help increase art sales.

“One of the things we see as far as helping to develop downtown … has been the creative industry,” Keefer says. “It actually is an economic driver in some respects.”

If people only tour galleries and don’t buy art, though, artists won’t be able to stay, Keefer says.

“We don’t want that to happen. We want them to stay and flourish.”

The campaign will be led by a new logo that Sonia Greteman agreed to have the Greteman Group create pro bono.

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Wichita Aero Club to unveil new Air Capital of the World campaign and logo

The new Greteman Group-designed Air Capital of the World logo.

WICHITA — Wichitans still call their home the Air Capital of the World, but the Wichita Aero Club wants to make sure others call it that, too.

“There’s other cities taking a little bit of a run (at it) if you will,” says Dave Franson, Aero Club executive director.

He says there are five main aviation clusters in the world: Wichita, Seattle, Montreal, Dallas and Toulouse, France.

“We continue to hold fast to the claim that we are the Air Capital of the World,” Franson says.

So the club and KPTS, Channel 8, are unveiling a new “reclaim the name” campaign and logo tonight during the premiere of the second season of PBS’ “The Aviators” at the National Center for Aviation Training.

“We just decided, hey, nowhere else has built anywhere close to the number of airplanes we’ve built here,” Franson says. There are “over 280,000 airplanes that have been built in Wichita, Kansas, since we started building them.”

He says the new Greteman Group-designed logo is an updated version of the original Air Capital of the World logo the Wichita chamber first unveiled in 1928 following a contest.

The 1928 Air Capital of the World logo.

“We’re kind of jumping the gun a little bit,” Franson says. “We’re going to (reprise) this same act at NBAA.”

The National Business Aviation Association annual meeting is next month, and Franson says there will be a new tagline to go with the new logo.

So what does he want to tell the world then?

“Wichita has been the Air Capital of the World since at least 1928 when we first took the title . . . and we’re not giving it up anytime soon.”

Wichita design community resoundingly rejects new Century II logo

centuryWICHITA — They’re calling it Wichita’s own version of the Gap debacle.

Along with unveiling almost $1 million in renovations at Century II late last week, the city debuted the center’s new logo.

The Wichita design community is not impressed.

“It made the rounds pretty immediately,” says Jarrett Green of Blink Interactive. “There was just a collective sort of, what is this?”

Among the comments is that it looks like: something a child drew, a part of the female anatomy, the top of a wok, the top of a grill and a briefcase in motion.

“I like it,” says John D’Angelo, the city’s arts and cultural services manager. “I think it’s nice. You know, it helps update the image.”

He says the logo will brand Century II as a performing arts center.

D’Angelo says he doesn’t mind the critical comments.

“We’ll take both criticism and compliments and review them. Absolutely. We’re always interested.”

The city paid $1,150 to Catherine Lewis of Exchange Design, who does a lot of work for the city’s division of arts and cultural services, to create the logo under its direction.

Not everyone with the city agreed with the direction, though.

“From a pragmatic point of view, I struggle a little bit — being in the business — with a logo design of that nature,” says City Council member Jeff Longwell, who has been in the graphics business for 30 years.

“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder here,” Longwell says. “Some people may just absolutely fall in love with the design. There’s elements of the design I kind of like.”

There are other parts he finds less appealing, and Longwell is concerned about reproduction issues.

He says the brush stroke that has a paint brush effect is hard to reproduce on, say, a shirt. He says there would be other screen printing reproduction issues as well.

Longwell plans to share his concerns with others at City Hall this week.

Several design experts have very specific concerns about the logo.

“For a premier center . . . the logo doesn’t work well in terms of clarity nor will it reproduce very well in other applications,” says Ann Willoughby of Willoughby Design in Kansas City.

“There are a lot of practical reasons it doesn’t work. For example, I don’t think it would work well as a sign, number one. I don’t think it’s going to reverse out.”

She means it won’t look good for times when it needs to be presented with a dark background.

Also, she says, the graphic isn’t in the right proportion to the letters.

“It will not function well as a logo for all the applications that you’ll need it for.”

There are broader issues as well, designers say.

“Century II is an iconic structure, and it really deserves something bold and elegant, and we just did not achieve that,” says Sonia Greteman of Greteman Group.

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You don’t say

“Thanks to our Day Sponsor, Greteman Group, which turns 21 today. Old enough to know better. Young enough to try it anyway.”

— A promo that’s running today on KMUW, 89.1-FM, to thank the advertising agency for supporting the station

Group forms to share iPhone app ideas

WICHITA — John David Burkholder is unabashedly passionate for his iPhone.

“It is quite a business tool,” says the manager of content and strategic positioning for Preferred Health Systems.

When he first got the phone a few months ago, Burkholder says he spent “several weeks of staying up late into the night looking for apps.”

But, he says, “With over 100,000 apps in the iTunes apps store, you’re never going to get a good chance to see what’s in there. There’s a lot of gems as you dig deep down into the app store.”

That’s why he’s now forming a group — iPhoneatics — through which he hopes business people can meet and share what they’ve found to be helpful.

“Are there things that we can learn from one another that we’re able to improve ourselves at work and even at home?” Burkholder says.

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You don’t say

“It wasn’t about, ‘I’m a movie star.’ It’s about I’m a part of this heritage and what it means to them to just be involved in aviation.”

Greteman Group’s Ashley Bowen Cook on attending the Living Legends of Aviation event (agency client Bombardier Learjet was the presenting sponsor) last week in California with actors and aviation buffs such as Kurt Russell, Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman and John Travolta

Tweet of the week

“Twitterfession: I’m singing ‘Inbox Zero’ to the tune of ‘Jukebox Hero’ in my head.”

— The tweet Todd Ramsey (@toddramsey) of the Greteman Group posted on Twitter after achieving a clean e-mail inbox this afternoon

Looking Glass dome finds new home at Domestic Laundry building

domeThe glass dome from the former Looking Glass restaurant is now hanging in the Domestic Laundry building at 1425 E. Douglas, which also is home to the Greteman Group and Primerica Financial Services.

Building owner Rich Vliet, who used to have the popular downtown restaurant, had to remove the glass from its former space at 412 E. Douglas to repair a ceiling.

He thought about donating it to Botanica, but he says there’s no place for it.

Vliet likes where it’s hanging now and invites people to pop in for a look.

“Hopefully, it will make an attractive entryway.”

You don’t say

“Don’t try and put cheese slices in your DVD drive. My son has tried this, and frankly I don’t put it past any of you either.”

— The lead advice from Greteman Group interactive developer Todd Gimlin’s e-mail to colleagues on how to handle computer problems while he’s on vacation