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The Sign Man turns commercial niche into art
By Irene Torres, KP News
First
came the Bionic Man, then the Ironman. Since fall of
2001, the Key Peninsula has been home to The Sign Man,
Chuck Kraft.
Raised in North Dakota, Kraft moved
to Tacoma with his family in the early 1960s and
graduated from Lincoln High School, later serving five
years in the U.S. Navy’s submarine service.
He began his sign design career by
decorating windows with Christmas paintings. Formally
schooled at UCLA under the tutelage of master of fine
arts from Otis Parsons School of Art Richard Shelton,
Kraft learned the craft of sign making over three years.
“I never regretted a day. I’m big on education,” he
says.
In animated conversation, the
60-year-old mustachioed Kraft explains the science
behind the art of signage — “visual communication and
design,” as he refers to it. “It’s a game of sign
dominance, to interrupt the subconscious scan patterns.
The eye is drawn to the most perfect form.”
In the sign business since 1984,
Kraft describes himself as a Gestaltist. “Based on past
and previous experiences, the eye develops a meaningful
relationship within two seconds — that’s all the time
there is to communicate your business’ intentions,” he
explains the theory of sign design.
He demonstrates the impact of
foreground, midground and background printing using his
own business cards as an example: “They are printed on
thicker stock than most business cards. Gild the text,
like they did in Biblical times. People hold on to shiny
things. They won’t throw them away.”
Kraft quotes William A. Lawrence,
“On the Plains of Hesitation, bleach the bones of
countless millions who, at the dawn of victory, sat down
to wait, and waiting, died.”
It’s the same advice he passed
along to students at Los Angeles Trade Technical
College, to whom he lectured while serving on its board
of directors. His personal philosophy is, “Endeavor to
persevere.”
Freely offering his professional
advice to businesses, Kraft says, “They need to have an
advertising budget, and they need to spend it.
Businesses become complacent. They should change their
signs about every five years, and maintain them, to keep
up with changes in the market and competition.”
He promotes “sign dominance, with
appropriate use of format, color and negative space.” A
“visual-type guy,” Kraft knows how to manipulate the
eye, using thickness and height of letters and contrast
of value.
A true artist, he admits he
dislikes the installation phase of the sign business,
but he sees no downside to the location of his business
on the Key Peninsula. “I can see the businesses are
coming…the changes in store for this area. It’s a gold
mine,” he says. Among his goals is to speak to the Key
Peninsula Business Association about the impact of
signage — good and bad. “I want to help people
understand visual communication,” he explains, “from the
perspective of design criteria, versus production (of
signs).
“I have an obligation to make them
more money. If they have more money, that will make them
happy. If they are happy, they will tell their friends,”
Kraft says.
Kraft works in a variety of media
but most of his work is in glass. His glass techniques
include glue-chipped, reverse gilding, clear and
sandblasting. His own log home near Carney Lake is
decorated with fine examples of his work. He says he
gets some of his ideas from other signs: “Good artists
borrow. Great artists steal.”
Of his technique and equipment he
says, “I do it the old fashioned way — with a No. 2
pencil.”
His art “niche” consists of
commercial wood and reverse glasswork interior designs
for restaurants like Rock’nFish in Manhattan Beach,
Calif., where his son is the executive chef, and a chain
of restaurants across America.
His work includes “point of
purchase” signs for back bars, and what he calls “ham
and eggs signs” for smaller eateries. Beer and ale
breweries have contracted him for their designs, and he
is among the top five producers of those signs, he says.
“They will be collector’s items someday,” he muses.
Kraft was among the first to design
graphic art for the sides of boats and to add lettering
to the tops of billboard signs. He created the artwork
for the monster truck “Rolling Thunder,” from which a
Matchbox toy model was made.
On a grander scale, one contract
was the gilding of a statue of the Virgin Mary for the
Archdiocese of Los Angeles’ Mary Star of the Sea Chapel,
erected 100 feet in the air. Others were for Reuters
International and Universal Studios in Los Angeles. He
has even collaborated with Bill Gates.
Hundreds of pieces of his work are
on display in California, Washington, Colorado,
Illinois, Indiana, and as far away as Japan. Kraft also
makes personal signs to commemorate births, deaths, and
milestones in between. He makes address signs and even
has designed an entrance sign for a ranch in Colorado.
Locally, he designed signs for O’Callahan’s and On The
Way Deli, both in Key Center.
He recently designed a logo for a
pacemaker company, Micropulse. “Pacemaker patients will
be wearing my art next to their heart,” he quipped.
He colors his conversation with an
analogy to the sparrow and the spider. “The spider sits
and waits for his prey to come into his web. I’m more
like the sparrow. I go out and look for the fly. I never
know where the next job is coming from. Most of my work
comes by word of mouth.”
With his wife, Ruth, and Char
Bantula helping with the sign business, The Sign Man has
time for a second interest, horse handling, working with
difficult horses. He serves on the committee for the
development of equestrian activities on the 360-acre
park property to be transferred to the KPMPD this year.
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