Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Journal 12

David Carson:

Be self indulgent! Carson said this as well as his lack of training is what helped him. people told him that things didn't work, but this is what he did to be self-indulgent and he would never want anyone working for him that wasn't completely submerged into the work. Some of his points:

let your personality come through the work
pull from who you are as a person
interpret the articles for the work you are creating

I really enjoyed David Carson. It seemed like because he did all of his work like this, it contains more meaning. He really takes this and makes the work his own. Questions I might ask him would be if he does have some kind of structure he still sticks by when creating. If he uses any sort of grid at all or just wings everything.

Paula Scher:

she always asks her clients what they want to be reflected in the logo because she wants to give them back their values visually.
type flow with concept and get inside info
she operates very strongly with instincts
you can do things in seconds. most of her best work was done right away because you either get it or you do not.

Wen Paula said she wasn't a refiner I could definitely relate. It's really hard to get over ideas sometimes and I do typically feel like I either have it or I don't. This is almost something I feel like she should work on though. I think that there is always improvement. Especially if you don't have exactly what your client is looking for. You need to keep pushing and finding research that will better your ideas and final product. If I were to ask her a question it would be about that. I want to know what she does when she doesn't have an idea for work or when she is struggling.

Milton Glaser:

not one of us know where we are going with design until it is over
artist have 2 lives. one of a business man and one of an artist
art is becoming part of a single experience, a gift. Something that can relate many people
you need to design things that mean something to you, to your family, to your city; things with meaning
if you can sustain your interest in what you are doing, you are a very fortunate person

Something I would ask him is how he stays interested. He mentioned that you need to do this and that he is happy that this is something that is happening to him, and he is always in awe of new work. I feel like sometimes you can get worn out and need a break and that your own work just starts to bore you. I don't think it is hard at all to stay interested in design. It is every where and extremely creative and something I constantly am looking at, but staying interested in your own work is much more tricky most of the time.

interesting ads

I thought THESE were interesting and some funny.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

More Journals

Journal 11
Debbie Millman is the President of the design division at Sterling Brands, an international design consultancy. She has been there for fourteen years and in that time she has worked on the redesign of global brands for Pepsi, Procter & Gamble, Campbell’s, Colgate, Hershey and Hasbro. Debbie is President of the AIGA, the professional association for design. She is a contributing editor at Print Magazine and the chair of the new Masters in Branding program at the School of Visual Arts. In 2005, she began hosting “Design Matters with Debbie Millman,” the first weekly radio talk show about design on the Internet.
(this info about Millman was copied from HERE).

I listened to the interview of Maira Kalman who is a designer, illustrator, educator, author and National Treasure. Millman referenced Greys Anatomy (one of my favorite shows) and talked about how she wanted to be happy and 'fit in.' In the beginning she was uncomfortable with her lifestyle but now she said she is comfortable with it. Millman goes in to details about changing herself to fit in by doing things such as changing her hair and wearing a shirt her mother made with letters too widly spaced. Millman fell in love with a sign "her story is strange," that Mira gave her. When asked by Millian, Maira said her first creative moment was looking at the wall and looking at the sky and being able to day dream. One of the points she made about her photography that I liked was "better to ask forgiveness then to ask permission." Sometimes if you ask permission you can not get that perfect photograph you may need and will regret it later on.

Journal 10
I really like GOOD because it has a lot to do with the projects we have been working with all year long. The a couple of the info graphs I found to be interesting were these:
This one was interesting because the viewer hardly has to do any work at all. It is about NASA's budget over time and just glancing at the beginning year and the ending year plus the image you already have a really good idea of what is going on. Then the viewer also has the chance to dig deeper to read more info above each date.
This was another I liked because it is talking about currency in a way that can relate to most people. I know in school I would hate looking at boring graphs in business classes. With something like this I just feel more open and excited to look at it because it is something I can actually understand without trying hard.

The videos from this site were interesting as well, containing some effects I have seen on other sites and youtube. It's always interesting to see type in motion and how it is used to convey messages. The videos I watched are not necessarily what I am shooting for in this project, but they do give me inspiration and are good things to keep in mind for later on.


Journal 9
I like HERE how they used type as the imagery in this poem.

I also like THIS ONE. It does well with the speech. Telling the story with visuals and also learning to space the words out well.

I did not like THIS ONE. It made me very anxious. and was annoying to watch. I believe it was mostly the sound doing this.

THIS ONE
was good in parts, but in the screaming areas, they could have done more with the words. changing the size, or type face, etc.

There are many things you can accomplish with just visuals and paper that you can not accomplish with a motion. And there are many things you can accomplish with a motion that you can not with visuals. For example, with motion you are able to lead the viewer at the exact pace you want them to go. You decide how fast you want them to see one section of type and how slow the next. In motion you are also able to add sound. With paper visuals you are able to let them enjoy the piece at the rate in which they please. You can show time in different ways. instead of long pauses you can leave multiple blank pages. With paper visuals it is easier for the audience to have their own interpretation of how things are said, work, and flow.

Journal 8
I read 13 Ways of Looking at a Typeface. The part I thought was really funny was that he talked about how used 37 different fonts on 6 pages and his wifes comment was "You've become a real slut, haven't you?" This made me laugh because I could never imagine someone going this over the top on 16 pages. I can't even begin to imagine how horrible this must have looked. After his short story, Michael Bierut, talks about how he narrows down fonts and what works well for him as well as thinking about why you are using a font and having a reason. A couple of the ones that stood out to me were:
Because of who designed it: its good to know background on the fonts you are using. Bierut said he was working on a project for a group of architects. He picked
Cheltenham, not only because it worked well, but because it was designed by an architect. This not only made him seem intelligent, but also fit for his work, and gave him a link from design to the architects he was working for.
Because it's boring: you need to make sure your type is not always dominant, especially when selling an idea and not a type.
Because it's specail : sometimes you have to get typefaces tailored to fit what you need and also to set what you make apart from others.

Another font I could see myself using over Futura would be Frutiger just because it contains many similar qualities.

Journal 7
For these pictures, I had the chance to take them while being home over spring break. All of them were taken in downtown Salina and Abilene. Abilene was one of my favorites for this because There were so many different types and executions of it in shop windows.









Journal 6

Ric Grefe - says that everyday he sees design that blows him away. He says that he sees design that inspires him and something that he does not look at with the thought that he could have done it, but the thought that this design is so good that he could have never created something like this. He thinks that designers should design their place in the world, and they should design a place for designers. I really like his way of thinking and also agree with his logic on many points.

Eric Ryan - said the single thing that inspires him is the camera. And not just the camera, but what it is able to do and allows you to do as the photographer. Photography can be taken to save and give you inspiration for future work. While I agree that the camera has made life easier for designers to save inspiration, I feel that if you dig deeper there is something even greater. Pushing it farther then the camera you could say a computer because it holds all of these pictures in data bases you can just find millions of pictures in a single click.

Debbie Millman - most inspiring design to her is pencils. This was interesting because I would have never thought to say something so simple. But in reality we use it for everything from communication to keeping ideas. She didn't explain enough about why she picked pencils which made her seem a little tacky.

Paula Scher - I found Paula boring! She didn't have much to say at all, and didn't seem to be inspired about design at all. She wasn't even willing to give one example. To every question she summed up the obvious and left me wanting more from her. She said that design is interesting in its time relating to something else but that there are no single examples and that design doesnt go around designing problems, problems emerge and people try to do things better.

Ellen Lupton - perfect design is a book. It is full of everything you would ever need. She also said something design could fix is a book. The book is perfect and imperfect. Things change and books are changed. We find new ways to spread information, ways to read, the book is changing. I really like that Ellen took one object and explained how it was perfect and yet imperfect because things change over time. Things perfect for one time will be improved for another.

Journal 5

One of the points that Stefan Sagmeister made at the beginning of the video was you have to be happy while you experience design as well as create it, which is a really great point. He went about explaining this in more of a humorous way but what i took from it was this: As designers we sometimes I feel like we are creating something we would like, but others its a rushed type project where we are just giving the client what they want even if it is not logical.


Another person I watched was Philippe Starck. He made jokes about design. About how he doesn't know why he is here and he feels as if his job is useless at times. During his talk, at times he was hard to understand because of his accent, but basically I got the general points. He emphasized on making products appropriate for human beings that will be useful and that they will want to buy. Not necessarily things of beauty, but things of use (such as the tooth brush). You have to keep in mind the individual and their background


Reading:

How Good is Good is a great article about Graphic Design and what it really means. Many of these thoughts I have had myself which made this short read very interesting for me. This piece throws out thoughts in comparing 'good' design to 'bad' design. Saying good design with a bad purpose will equal a bad outcome and bad design with a good purpose probably wont do that well either. But it also gets the reader to think about exactly what it is that they are designing for; should they rather be called a 'commercial designer' that sells an idea, or a 'Graphic Designer' that makes people aware. A lot can be said through that last sentence. Graphic Design has a major impact on people and used in the right way can be a very moving and strong pull on society. I think it enlightens designers to do work hard making a good design that means something to them and can make a difference rather than creating some useless or destructive piece of design. It was enlightening and made me think about my life after college. Some times designers get caught up thinking that they can not make a difference and they are "selling" people useless things. When in reality you can "sell" any idea and if you believe in as long as its a good designing and meaningful, it will have an impact.


Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Monday, April 5, 2010

extended speech by Princess Elizabeth

you can find and listen to it here.... Wartime Broadcast to just hear Elizabeth start at 0:47


In wishing you all 'good evening' I feel that I am speaking to friends and companions who have shared with my sister and myself many a happy Children's Hour.

Thousands of you in this country have had to leave your homes and be separated from your fathers and mothers. My sister Margaret Rose and I feel so much for you as we know from experience what it means to be away from those we love most of all.

To you, living in new surroundings, we send a message of true sympathy and at the same time we would like to thank the kind people who have welcomed you to their homes in the country.

All of us children who are still at home think continually of our friends and relations who have gone overseas - who have travelled thousands of miles to find a wartime home and a kindly welcome in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and the United States of America.

My sister and I feel we know quite a lot about these countries. Our father and mother have so often talked to us of their visits to different parts of the world. So it is not difficult for us to picture the sort of life you are all leading, and to think of all the new sights you must be seeing, and the adventures you must be having.

But I am sure that you, too, are often thinking of the Old Country. I know you won't forget us; it is just because we are not forgetting you that I want, on behalf of all the children at home, to send you our love and best wishes - to you and to your kind hosts as well.

Before I finish I can truthfully say to you all that we children at home are full of cheerfulness and courage. We are trying to do all we can to help our gallant sailors, soldiers and airmen, and we are trying, too, to bear our own share of the danger and sadness of war.

We know, everyone of us, that in the end all will be well; for God will care for us and give us victory and peace. And when peace comes, remember it will be for us, the children of today, to make the world of tomorrow a better and happier place.

My sister is by my side and we are both going to say goodnight to you.

Come on, Margaret.

Goodnight, children.

Goodnight, and good luck to you all.

Shorter version can be found HERE


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Homework: Journals, questions, etc.

SEQUENCE DESIGN: The sequence design was a good way to practice thinking through spacing of type and how to make it visually more appealing. Type in different styles, sizes and layout on the page all give the books different meanings. If an actually speech such as the one we are going to do in class were to be put in, The pauses would be shown through the text being spaced out more and more with color fields in between and things that more emphasis were on would be the bold, all caps, examples.

VIDEOS WITH AND WITHOUT SOUNDS: Watching the videos with and without sound were completely different experiences. First I watched without sound so I had no idea what was going on or what the animator was thinking. Personally, without sound seemed to be a little boring and parts were too slow, especially in the video Human Factor- title sequence by saul bass. I felt that once the music was in there were more emphasis on things, also adding suspense and anticipation to movement. Music and sound also work together to make the animation smoother and seem more precise with purpose.




Speech by Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret:

I can truthfully say to you all, that we children at home are full of cheerfulness and courage. We are trying to do all we can to help our gallant sailers, soldiers, and airmen. And when peace comes, remember it will be for us, the children of today,to make the world of tomorrow a better and happier place. My sister is by my side and we are both going to say goodnight to you. Come on Margaret. Good night soldiers. Goodnight and good luck to you all.

Who is speaking?
Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret

Why was/is the speech important to society?
Its a speech by children addressed to children which does not happen a lot.

Why do you feel in is important or interesting?
It was by Princess Elizabeth on the radio addressed to the children of England (many living away from home because of the war). It was to be calming because Elizabeth was only 14 years old and this BBC broadcast was during children's hour so they would hear and not worry. In the extended version she talks of her parents and what she knows about the war. How she is confident that peace will come.

What is the emotion, mood, tone, personality, feeling of the speech?
Uplifting. No worries, confident.

What is intonation, emphasis, what is loud, stressed, or soft. Where are there pauses...
truthfully, children at home, cheerfulness and courage, sailers, soldiers, airmen

What do you FEEL should be loud or soft, long pause or rushed?
long pause on confident and peace and more positive ideas...more rushed on soldiers, airmen, and sailers just because it is the scary thing to children.

Is there a call to action? When listening to it what are key/emphasized words?
she is saying that the children of today will make the world a better place once war comes.

How does it make you feel?
surprisingly calm. Because she is so young it was a good idea to have her talk about something so controversial. Even though adults might think she doesn't know what she is talking about, it is calming for other children.

How do imagine that the audience felt?
I feel this was sort of a calming effect for children. Children were very scared and uneasy, especially ones away from their parents during the war. To have a figure to look up to, especially one close in age would be a relief.

Could there be another interpretation of the speech?
Another interpretation is that maybe she didn't want to do the speech at all or even know anything about the war she was just made do this to be a calmer. But Another interpretation entirely I do not believe so.

Write/find a short bio, of the person giving the speech.

Elizabeth II has been the United Kingdom's reigning monarch since 1952. She was proclaimed queen on 6 February 1952 following the death of her father, George VI; she was formally crowned the next year, on 2 June 1953. Her husband, Prince Philip, comes from the royal family of Greece and was created Duke of Edinburgh prior to their wedding on 20 November 1947. Elizabeth and Philip had four children: Charles (b. 1948), Anne (b. 1950), Andrew (b. 1960) and Edward (b. 1964); as the eldest, Prince Charles is heir to the throne. Queen Elizabeth is the sister of the late Princess Margaret, daughter of the late Queen Mother, mother-in-law to the late Princess Diana, and grandmother to the princes William and Harry. She also shares a name with a famous predecessor, Queen Elizabeth I. The queen celebrated her Golden Jubilee in 2002, marking 50 years on the throne.