Amazing Print Drawing
Amazing Print DrawingSnapChat:>> seyhmuskinoInstagram:https://instagram.com/seyhmuskino/YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kC4oyyM7cXs
Posted by Tuvaldeki Sanat on Wednesday, 1 July 2015
Nicole H.D.W. Sinclair
Wednesday, 1 July 2015
Screen Printing - CMYK Printing Demonstration
I have recently come across this video of a designer creating a multiple colour print using their detailed illustration. I love how you can see the image form with each layer of colour as the combination of CMYK ink is used to create build up the browns and then finally outline the drawing using the "Key" colour black.
Tuesday, 9 June 2015
Şeyhmus Kino - Realistic Painting
I find this sped up video of a portrait painting to be very inspirational and admirable. I love how it reveals the lengthy process, from starting with the initial geometric marks which are then overlaid with colour and varying tones to build up this beautiful realistic looking portrait shown at the end of the video.
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Posted by Tuvaldeki Sanat on Sunday, 15 February 2015
Saturday, 30 May 2015
New Visual Language - Outcome
Please see below first my final magazine design and after that my research and documentation booklet.
Earth Artifact - Research, Production and Final Outcome
Below is my Earth Artifact booklet which encloses all the research, initial ideas, process and production, development and the final outcomes to this project.
City In Flux - Final Outcome
Below is my City In Flux booklet which I have then given a sub-title of "Social Decline" as to represent the feel to my response. Further down you can see my research, development and process documentation, this explains my thinking behind the project.
Below is my research, development and process documentation, this explains my thinking behind the project.
Below is my research, development and process documentation, this explains my thinking behind the project.
Friday, 1 May 2015
Group Presentation
As part of the Process and Production module of my course we
were set the task of creating a group presentation about our responses to the
previous brief, in this case it was about the City In Flux. I found the
activity to be useful in honing my presenting and team management skills. To
start with we were placed into random groups of around four and once the group
I was in was together and the lecture had finished we began to create a work-plan.
We then met up later in the week and created a time-plan, as we created a
presentation intro plan later towards the presentation deadline. After reading
the brief several times to ensure we understood what was asked, we then created
a bullet-point list of subjects to cover which then also gave us an estimated
time allowance per person. The presentations were for 15 minutes per group,
with 10 minutes presentation time and 5 minutes questions and reflection. We
worked out this would give each of us around a minute and a half each for our
individual sections and we also allowed a minute spare for any overrun time.
After initial discussion it was decided that I would be the
team leader and we designated the designing, presenting and copywriting roles
to be shared between each of us. I found working as a team was difficult at
points due to communication issues over the holiday period, as each of us had
busy points throughout the holidays which made sticking to the timeframe
difficult. As a result of this we met up a couple of days before the hand in
date and worked through the checklist.
On the actual presentation day one team member was unfortunately
absent, so I stepped up to the mark and read out their individual section. I
had only briefly been talked through their response to the project due to
choosing to present each section in turns, this meaning that I was required to
read from the slides. I have learnt from this that you need to have a back-up
plan for if the initial plan doesn’t work out and also to ensure you understand
your peers’ responses thoroughly in case of absence.
Please see the presentation slides below.
InDesign - Session Two
Overview
In this workshop we looked at how rivers, orphans, widows
and hyphens can degrade the look of a publication. Rivers make it harder to
read due to the larger areas of white space, this is because any area of one
colour larger then another will always attract our attention. This relates to
the figure-ground perspective. In regards to hyphens they simply look messy and
delay our reading, as we have to move from one sentence end to the next
beginning in order to read the word. For widows and orphan’s it is due to the
eye focussing on the unusual within a page, such as if there were a red ball in
a box of yellow balls for instance. Finally there is also the case of paragraph
shaping (A.K.A. Clean rags), this can be particularly tricky to balance out
against the widows and orphans and can require compromise between the two.
These are all decisions a designer has to make when designing the final stages
of a magazine, newspaper or book layout.
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| Example of Rivers and Widows. |
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| Leaflet Design |
We were also shown other tools within InDesign that
are used within magazine and leaflet design. This included the creating tab leaders,
which can be used to aid menu pricing lists and also how to create a contents
page.
How did you find it?
![]() |
| Front Cover Design |
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| Magazine Spread Layouts |
I am quite pleased with my design, however I feel I had spent too much time on it, though this is due to getting to grips with the techniques. I am particularly fond of the front cover and pages 6-7, this is due to the dynamic feel to the cover through the use of the energetic action shot paired with the colour choices. While I am pleased with the last two-page spread due to the juxtaposition of content, though I feel if it were to be published in a real-life magazine then it would need further improvement.
All images used within the design were found using Google Images, no copyright infringement intended, used for educational purposes only.
Below is the experimental design:
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