If you work in the creative industry, you probably aren鈥檛 in your role just to pass the time. The main reason for that is, it鈥檚 tough! When talking to the graphic designers from the , we all agreed that working in the creative industry has its challenges.
The Crown is a period show which follows the lives of the British Royal Family from the 1940s to the 1990s. Since the first season was released in 2016, it has captured a huge audience with more than a million听people in the UK watching season 5 on its first day of release.
I chatted to , and from the about being a graphic designer for the high-budget multi-episode show.
Five seasons in, and each one consisting of ten one-hour episodes, the team have had a mammoth task designing a huge number of graphics for The Crown over the years.听
The role of the graphic designer
Graphics is one of the newest departments in the world of TV and film, but what does the role of a graphic designer look like?
Camise explained: 鈥淭he first thing we do when we rock up is get the scripts and read through them. With a massive fat highlighter, we go through and identify anything that is adversely graphic – so Princess Dianna flipping through a magazine – to anything that鈥檚 possibly a graphic, and we鈥檇 try as best as we can to formulate a list that explains what our workload may look like.鈥
To make sure everything鈥檚 cohesive, the team then confirm with the creative designer on set and agree on which assets are important.
As The Crown is a period show, the graphics team rely heavily on the research team to make sure assets are historically accurately. So, the next step for them would be checking in with the research team.
Having previously needed to do the research themselves, this is new, and a massive help on the set. 鈥淥n previous jobs, you do your own research, whereas these guys are proper researchers. And it just means we don鈥檛 have to spend three days finding the specific details,鈥 Amy explained.
That could be two weeks鈥 worth of work for the team just reading the script, speaking to the designer and liaising with the research team. And that鈥檚 before they even open Photoshop or Illustrator.
Toby explained how versatile the graphics for The Crown have to be: 鈥淚t ranges from the Kremlin floor designs or an 80s Chinese takeaway menu to the life rings on the Britannia yacht. Every set has something different.鈥
The TV and film industry is heavily perceived as very glitz and glam, but Amy said that isn鈥檛 the case for the graphic design team: 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of background work. Things that you鈥檇 never see like labels that need to be fixed or newspapers and paperwork.鈥
The challenge: rewrites
鈥淚鈥檝e done a lot of episodic shows before, but The Crown is just different because of the sheer size of it.鈥 Toby told me.
Unlike smaller shows, The Crown doesn鈥檛 have many budget constraints due to the success it鈥檚 had. The stakes are high and that means there鈥檚 an increased chance of late changes the team must make very quickly.
When asked if things often change on set, Toby, Camise and Amy all laughed and said 鈥測es鈥.
鈥The Crown differs to most other jobs because of the rewrites. The rewrites are relentless as they have a script team working all the way through the show. Normally when you get a script, they kind of get locked. There will be the occasional tweak, but with The Crown, they鈥檙e constantly changing it,鈥 Toby says.
The team explained to me that even tiny elements can need updating. 鈥淚t鈥檒l usually just be two words that need swapping over. If Charles is reading that letter and it鈥檚 in shot, and you can see those two words, you can鈥檛 get away with it, you have to change it. They鈥檒l rewrite up until literally half an hour before the shoot sometimes.鈥
The scripts changes can mean a calm day becoming a manic day at the flip of a switch. 鈥淚t all explodes and it鈥檚 all crazy again,鈥 Amy says
The challenge: not taking things personally
Toby explained that they can often spend a lot of time on a graphic for it to then not be used in a scene: 鈥淚t鈥檚 the same with every job, something鈥檚 scripted, and they think it鈥檚 going to be very heavily featured. But then they end up cutting the asset out because they can get a better story without showing it.鈥
Creatives often put their heart and soul into what they produce, and so it can sometimes be difficult to not take things personally. Particularly in the TV and film industry, this is something you have to overcome.
The challenge: being convincing enough, but not getting sued
When watching The Crown, you may wonder how challenging it is to recreate a set from the 1950s and make sure it鈥檚 historically accurate. Whether that vase would have had that pattern or if the floor has the correct shapes for that decade. Seems like a lot of pressure right?
The team actually said the complete opposite. With such a great research department, the graphics team don鈥檛 stress about the historical accuracy. 鈥淭hey have biographies for all the Royal Family. They could say what lipstick Diana used, what drink she drank at 5 o鈥檆lock in the evening.鈥 Amy explained.
In fact, the pressure comes when the show gets closer to modern day because they are more people alive who may spot mistakes: 鈥淭here鈥檚 more eyes to scrutinise if we鈥檝e not quite got it right. If you notice Diana is binging on the wrong bar of chocolate, then we鈥檝e failed.鈥 Camise explains.
鈥淚f you鈥檝e got a newspaper in season 2 with some random politician pictured, you can use a photo of any man; people won鈥檛 remember. Whereas now, people will remember what鈥檚 his face who was the chancellor in 鈥92. So you can鈥檛 have some guy who looks kind of the same.鈥
90% of the props the team design has to be as close to the original as possible so people don鈥檛 notice it鈥檚 not the real thing, while also ensuring it鈥檚 different enough that they don鈥檛 get sued.
Toby elaborates on the challenge: 鈥The Crown is changing the ways these big things work. From a legal point of view, the productions are getting more and more paranoid about getting sued, so they understand they have to spend money on that.鈥
Camise summed up the issue: 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get things as close to the real thing as possible, but different enough we don鈥檛 get sued, but close enough so someone doesn鈥檛 notice.鈥
The challenge: dealing with logistic nightmares
Having worked on four seasons so far, the team have created graphics for sets dating from the 1950s to the 1990s. But was there a decade that proved more difficult?
鈥淭hey all bring up their own issues. You really have to think more creatively to get around things because it鈥檚 a historical show; you have to make it real. There are a lot of legal roads blocks you have to get around. So you have to create things that look real but pass clearances.
鈥淕oing back to previous seasons where it was older stuff, our process would often be: get the real thing, scan it in, clear it up and edit it. But even that can be a nightmare because you鈥檙e trying to match something that鈥檚 so much older, and it has been in storage for however long, and lost so much quality. The older ones are almost like restoration work,鈥 Amy explained.
Toby added: 鈥淏ecause we use digital means to make something look old, it鈥檚 an art in itself really. That鈥檚 more of a challenge for the older seasons鈥.
Toby explained how being a graphic designer also throws up logistic issues: 鈥淚n season 5, they鈥檙e trying to tell a story with a certain paper trail. In the library of Windsor Castle, they get a specific book on the Romanov family and a specific book on the British Royal Family, and they want to juxtapose how they are the same.
鈥淏ut we can only use a certain amount of cleared photos, and some photos didn鈥檛 get cleared in time. It鈥檚 not difficult to design, it鈥檚 just the logistics of making it work. It鈥檚 so painful. That鈥檚 not just The Crown either. That does happen on a fair few shows.鈥
Being problem solvers is something this team have become accustomed to as quite often issues are thrown their way that create huge blockers.
Camise told me how the Harrods brand created some headaches: 鈥淚n season 5, we had a very interesting and complex backwards and forwards because we could say the word Harrods, and they could show it, but we couldn鈥檛 show it in an italicised serif font, and we couldn鈥檛 use their gold or green. So that was a strategic, logistic and design nightmare just because they go to Harrods!鈥
The solutions: time
If you鈥檝e seen any of The Crown, you鈥檒l agree with me when I say the team clearly pulled it out of the bag with their graphics. But with so many challenges and obstacles, how did they overcome them?
Camise explained to me how season 4 differed, allowing them to be more prepared before they were even given the script.
鈥淪eason 4 was lovely. We really fought to get our team in a lot sooner than we had in previous seasons, and we built up a stock catalogue of things that are generic to The Crown. So newspapers, magazines, chocolate bars, all the things we knew would be used. I think we had about four months where we just worked on building up a volume of graphics for the world of The Crown ahead of the things that always change.鈥
The solution: team numbers
Camise, Amy and Toby decided that a larger team was needed for season 4. By bringing in a new team of assistants and a new graphic designer, they were more prepared for any challenges that would be threw at them.
鈥淭he team had time to learn together, and to trust to support each other, which is invaluable to a job that鈥檚 so big and sprawling,鈥 Camise explained. 鈥淭hey were working cohesively and collectively. It鈥檚 so fast and it鈥檚 so intense. The only way to function is to be dependent on one another. To lean on one another without feeling it鈥檚 a weakness; it鈥檚 a strength.鈥
Camise told me how, traditionally in the TV and film industry, people are groomed to look out for themselves, and if they鈥檝e got a quiet day, they keep quiet about it. But their team are very much the opposite and will help each other out to overcome issues as a team.
鈥淲e got a really great bunch of people together. It鈥檚 a really strong team that we鈥檙e hoping to never let go,鈥 Amy added. For Season 5 the team included , , , , , , and
The solution: thinking ahead
With such a fast-paced show that can change at any time, the team adapted and understood they needed to be fluid with their ways of working. This meant the team鈥檚 visual decision making and design under pressure grew with each series they worked on.
鈥淏ecause we know how intense the rewrites can be, we always lovingly gift our standbys a box of 鈥榞et out of shit鈥 graphics. Basically, it鈥檚 a load of documents that can be used for x, y, and z. Here鈥檚 a box of photographs that can go anywhere, they鈥檙e all licensed. We accept our fate that we won鈥檛 have the most amount of time,鈥 Camise explained.
The solution: collaboration
Just as the team work very closely together and collaborated amongst themselves, they also look outside of their team when certain challenges get thrown their way.
Amy explained their relationship with Alamy: 鈥The Crown is the newspaper show. They tell the story through a newspaper, and of course that鈥檚 where 64体育fit in. It鈥檚 a huge part of our job, for us it鈥檚 one of the first things we do when we get in. 鈥榃ho鈥檚 organising the 64体育account?鈥 Whether it鈥檚 a big or small job, we can鈥檛 generate everything. We need that facility, especially with photographs. The Crown is hugely reliant on photos.鈥
Amy, Toby and Camise have shown first-hand what the role of Graphic Designer on The Crown is like – highlighting the importance of time, a strong team and being prepared. Collaboration is also a key attribute to the success of the team and plays a huge role in their work: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we could do it without Alamy.鈥 Camise says
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