STOP PRE

Pre Stencil

That’s the stencil I made for the opener of the April 2013 Runner’s World feature, “That Pre Thing” — an epic story about why 1970s runner Steve Prefontaine still matters nearly 40 years after his death at age 24.

I was only vaguely aware of Pre before I read this feature. About ten year ago, as a fan of director Steve James’s documentary Hoop Dreams (and later Stevie, one of my all-time favorite movies), I rented his film Prefontaine. But I stopped watching it after only a few minutes, when I realized it wasn’t a documentary.

Soon after accepting the design director job at Runner’s World last summer, and before my first day at work, I stopped in a running store in Manhattan, and saw on its back wall a poster of Pre in a STOP PRE t-shirt. I thought it was really cool, and made a mental note of that image, should I ever have to do something on Pre in the future:

Stop Pre

(This t-shirt was made by a fan, as a response to the Go Pre! signs that were popular at Pre’s races.)

When I learned that the April 2013 issue would include a lengthy feature on why Pre still matters today, I thought of that image. I hadn’t yet received the text, but I knew I wanted something bold and unique to Runner’s World for the feature opener.  I started messing around in InDesign, then in Photoshop, and came up with an idea of a stop sign vandalized with a spray-painted image of Pre on it. I emailed the sketch to my editors and sold them on the idea:

Pre InDesign Sketch

We always use top-notch illustrators in Runner’s World, and I could’ve easily commissioned one for this assignment. But I really wanted to do it myself. I drew my stencil in Illustrator, basing it on about four different Pre photos. Although his hair was very smooth and straight in real life, I embellished mine, and made it wild and fiery:

Stop Pre Vector

A coworker volunteered a battered old stop sign that he’d kept in his basement for over 20 years:

Stop Sign and Pre Stencil

Once I mounted and cut out my stencil, I tested it out on the back of the stop sign in my frigid garage (it was January):

Pre Stencil Test

I was thrilled with the results. I’d never made this kind of thing before.

Later I flipped it over and sprayed the front. (But before that I knocked out some of the white lettering with red spray paint.) I let it dry overnight in a toasty, ventilated bathroom, but not before snapping a photo and posting it to my Instagram account:

The next morning — Pre’s birthday, coincidentally — RunnerSpace grabbed the photo from my Instagram account and posted it on theirs (with a credit to me). It was great to see all the Likes and positive comments add up so quickly. Other people started posting it to their accounts, and even applying new filters to it. It was amusing to see my PF Flyers show up in the Instagram galleries of strangers, in photos with the hashtag #stoppre.

My managing editor went one step further and made a hasty STOP BEN sign in Photoshop:

A Rodale staff photographer snapped a shot of my sign in the studio. Here’s how my opening spread turned out:

That Pre Thing

It’s the first time I’ve given myself an art credit in two years.

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Runny Paint

Making the Spring Shoe Guide opener

That’s a behind-the-scenes shot of a feature opener from the March issue of Runner’s World. The photo team dipped brand new running shoes into paint, pressed the soles against that slick paper, then squeezed more paint out of ketchup bottles to give it that exaggerated drip and pooling. I was inspired by French street artist Zevs when I pitched the idea.

Here’s how my final layout turned out:

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Better Halfs

Better Halfs sketch

That’s a quick sketch I put together to pitch an idea I had for the opener of Runner’s World‘s half-marathon service package. I took a stock photo of a runner, colored her clothing a few different colors, then repeated a pattern until the page was nearly filled. I was inspired by the Elle Collections runway collage covers that first came out a couple years ago. Here’s how my final turned out:

The Better HalfsThat was a real challenge to put together. It’s made from documentary photos of only six different people, whose outfits I re-colored in six different hues. I assembled the pattern in InDesign, but it was far too taxing on the computer to do it all in one document. So This final composition links to eight different InDesign files.

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NY, NY (New Year, New You)

Making the bib wall

Finished the bib wall

That’s associate photo editor Whitney Ellis with the 8-foot by 8-foot bib wall — a backdrop idea that my new photo director Michele Ervin and I came up with. These are all photocopies of the many race bibs owned by Runner’s World staffers. The backdrop was used for a special online project, but we plan to work it into the magazine at some point.

Speaking of the magazine, here’s the newsstand cover for the January issue — Michele’s first complete issue since returning to Runner’s World:

New Year, New You cover

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Runner Bodies

The Runner's Body

For the December issue of Runner’s World, we reached out through social media to real runners, and invited them to participate in our “Runner’s Body” feature. We immediately received photos from hundreds of interested people from all over the country. Over the next few weeks we narrowed the list down to 22 runners with very different body types. We enlisted Seattle-based photographer José Mandojana — whom I worked with quite a bit during my days at Seattle Met — and flew him to Los Angeles, Houston and New York City for a series of daylong shoots. (He writes about the experience here.) .

Here’s the newsstand cover:

The Body Issue

I persuaded the editors to try something different for subscribers:

The Body Issue subscriber cover

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